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Pallas's and Leaf
* Phylloscopus proregulus Pallas's Leaf Warbler
* Pallas's Leaf Warbler, Phylloscopus proregulus
The Pallas's Leaf Warbler or Pallas's Warbler ( Phylloscopus proregulus ) is a leaf warbler which breeds in southern Siberia ( from Novosibirsk Oblast east to Magadan Oblast ), northern Mongolia, and northeastern China.
# REDIRECT Pallas's Leaf Warbler
# redirect Pallas's Leaf Warbler
This is one of the smaller Old World warblers, at 9. 5 – 11 cm long and weighing 4 – 9 g distinctly smaller than a Chiffchaff but slightly larger than Pallas's Leaf Warbler.
# REDIRECT Pallas's Leaf Warbler
# REDIRECT Pallas's Leaf Warbler

Pallas's and Warbler
Many rare species of bird have been found on the island, and it is probably the best place in western Europe to see skulking Siberian passerines such as Pechora Pipit, Lanceolated Warbler and Pallas's Grasshopper Warbler.
* Locustella certhiola Pallas's Grasshopper Warbler
* Pallas's Grasshopper Warbler, Locustella certhiola
It can easily be distinguished from Pallas's Warbler as it does not have the a conspicuous yellow central crown stripe and rump patch shown that species.
This is a mechanism that leads to birds such as Pallas's Warbler turning up thousands of kilometres from where they should be.
Adult Firecrests are unlikely to be confused with any other species ; Pallas's Warbler has a similar head and wing pattern, but its crown stripe is pale lemon, not bright yellow or orange, and its supercilium is also pale yellow, not bright white.
The Firecrest can also be separated from Pallas's Warbler by the warbler's pale crown stripe and yellow rump.
The Pallas's Grasshopper Warbler ( Locustella certhiola ) is an Old World warbler in the grass warbler genus Locustella.
Note that the sixth edition of Clements checklist refers to this species as " Pallas's Warbler ", a name more commonly used for Phylloscopus proregulus
# redirect Pallas's Grasshopper Warbler
# redirect Pallas's Grasshopper Warbler
A number of animals were described by Pallas, and his surname is included in their common names, including: Pallas's Cat, Pallas's Long-tongued Bat, Pallas's Tube-nosed Fruit Bat, Pallas's Squirrel, Pallas's Warbler, Pallas's Cormorant, Pallas's Fish-eagle, Pallas's Gull, Pallas's Sandgrouse, Pallas's Rosefinch, and Pallas's Grasshopper Warbler.

Pallas's and is
Plutoids, objects like Pluto, are similar to terrestrial planets in the fact that they do have a solid surface, but are, on average, composed of more icy materials ( Ceres's density is about that of Pluto, and Haumea's is similar to Pallas's ).
The Brown Dipper ( Cinclus pallasii ), alternatively known by the common names Pallas's Dipper, Asian Dipper or the Asiatic Dipper, is an aquatic songbird found in the mountains of southern and central Asia.
Pallas's cat ( Otocolobus manul ), also called the manul, is a small wild cat having a broad but patchy distribution in the grasslands and montane steppe of Central Asia.
Pallas's cat is about the size of a domestic cat, with a long body and a long tail.
Pallas's cat is native to the steppe regions of Central Asia, at elevations up to.
Captive-breeding of Pallas's cat is difficult.
The Pallas's Sandgrouse ( Syrrhaptes paradoxus ) is a medium large bird in the sandgrouse family named after the German zoologist Peter Simon Pallas.
Pallas's Sandgrouse is 30 – 41 cm long with small, pigeon-like head and neck, but sturdy compact body.
The male Pallas's Sandgrouse is distinguished by its grey heads and breast, orange face and grey breast band.
The Pallas's Reed Bunting ( Emberiza pallasi ) ( also known as Pallas's Bunting ) is a passerine bird in the bunting family Emberizidae, a group now separated by most modern authors from the finches, Fringillidae.
The Pallas's Reed Bunting is a small passerine bird, similar to a small Reed Bunting.
The Pallas's Gull or Great Black-headed Gull, Ichthyaetus ichthyaetus, is a large gull.
The Pallas's Gull is one of the species to which the Agreement on the Conservation of African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds ( AEWA ) applies.

Pallas's and named
Pallas's cat is a small Asian cat that was named after a German naturalist, Peter Pallas, who first described it, noting that it is missing the front pre-molar teeth, giving it 28 teeth instead of 30, as in most fields.

Pallas's and after
Pallas's cats give birth to a litter of around two to six kittens after a gestation period of 66 to 75 days, typically in April or May.
File: Pallas's Gull ( Larus ichthyaetus ) after catching a prey W IMG 6953. jpg | after catching a prey in Krishna Wildlife Sanctuary, Andhra Pradesh, India.

Pallas's and Peter
These included Vitus Bering's Second Kamchatka Expedition of 1733 – 43, expeditions to observe the 1769 transit of Venus from eight locations in Russian Empire, and Peter Simon Pallas's expeditions to Siberia.
Since Peter Simon Pallas's first description published in 1777, a significant number of subspecies have been described between 1820 and 1992.

Pallas's and on
Chicks, especially those more than half grown are sometimes preyed on by raptors such as Pallas's Fish Eagle ( Haliaetus leucoryphus ).
Examples of recycled material include Pallas's " Col raggio placido ", which is based on Lucifer's aria from La resurrezione ( 1708 ), " O voi dell ' Erebo ", which was itself adapted from Reinhard Keiser's 1705 opera Octavia.

Pallas's and ;
The song is a short phrase, loud and distinctive ; nothing like the insect-like reeling of European Locustella species, and more musical than that of Pallas's Grasshopper Warbler.
The Central Asian Pallas's Sea eagle's relationships to the other taxa is more obscure ; it seems closer to the three Holarctic species which evolved later and may be an early offshoot of this northward expansion ; it does not have the hefty yellow bill of the northern forms, retaining a smaller darker beak like the tropical species.

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