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Central Asiatic Sandgrouse (Syrrhaptes paradoxus)

Central Asiatic Sandgrouse (Syrrhaptes paradoxus).jpg Egyptian treatment of birds. from hieroglyphics of the 18th DynastyMiniaturesThe Saiga-Antelope (Saiga tartarica)Egyptian treatment of birds. from hieroglyphics of the 18th DynastyMiniaturesThe Saiga-Antelope (Saiga tartarica)Egyptian treatment of birds. from hieroglyphics of the 18th DynastyMiniaturesThe Saiga-Antelope (Saiga tartarica)Egyptian treatment of birds. from hieroglyphics of the 18th DynastyMiniaturesThe Saiga-Antelope (Saiga tartarica)Egyptian treatment of birds. from hieroglyphics of the 18th DynastyMiniaturesThe Saiga-Antelope (Saiga tartarica)Egyptian treatment of birds. from hieroglyphics of the 18th DynastyMiniaturesThe Saiga-Antelope (Saiga tartarica)

his migration must have been an unusually large one. It has been suggested that the Glacial period had some connection with it, and there can be little doubt, as we shall see later on, that a change of climate probably brought about this great Siberian invasion of Europe. But other causes might tend in the same direction, such as want of sufficient food after a few years of great increase of any particular species. It is not known to what we owe the periodic visits of the Central Asiatic Sandgrouse (Syrrhaptes paradoxus), but certain it is that immense flocks of these birds invade Europe from time to time at the present day, just as those mammals may have done in past ages.