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The flowers of Wutong Mountain are not over, and the mangrove forest is happy to see new birds

author:Two or three miles of information Shenzhen
The flowers of Wutong Mountain are not over, and the mangrove forest is happy to see new birds

Original title: Wutong Mountain Flowers Have Not Been Done The mangrove forest is happy to see new birds

The flowers of Wutong Mountain are not over, and the mangrove forest is happy to see new birds

The 6th Morphyllum Azalea Fair in Wutong Mountain, Shenzhen 2021 was successfully concluded a few days ago. This year's flower fair adopts the mode of live video + live photo + cloud guide + cloud flower appreciation, and strives to build a live broadcast matrix for citizens and friends. During the flower fair, about 250,000 people visited the exhibition through 28 offline guided tours and on-site exhibitions. There were about 6,000 visitors and nearly 1,000 audiences who enjoyed flowers through the four "Cloud Flower Viewing" + "Cloud Guided Tours" online viewing.

The flowers of Wutong Mountain are not over, and the mangrove forest is happy to see new birds

Figure 1

The flowers of Wutong Mountain are not over, and the mangrove forest is happy to see new birds

Figure 2

Shenzhen Special Economic Zone News (reporter Qin Qiwei) reporter learned from the Guangdong Lingling Futian National Nature Reserve Management Bureau on April 9 that since March, the Futian Mangrove Forest Reserve has found three new records of birds. This brings the number of existing bird monitoring records in the reserve to 259 species. Futian Mangrove Forest Reserve has a good mangrove ecosystem and has become an important resting place for migratory birds.

On March 28, a "green dove" (picture 1) was found in a large tree near the mouth of the Fengtang River. It is a green-winged golden dove, which belongs to the resident bird in Shenzhen, likes to move in the dense vegetation of the lower layer of the forest, and generally appears in the better woodland ecological environment.

On March 29, the sound of "tuk tuk tuk" pecking wood was heard near fish pond No. 2. The monitor followed the sound to find a smallest woodpecker in Guangdong (Picture 2), which generally appears in the better woodland ecological environment. (Reporter Qin Qiwei He Long)

(Editor-in-charge: Li Yu, Chen Yuzhu)

Source: People's Daily Shenzhen

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