Paul Alexander Zino: Difference between revisions

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Zino was born in [[Madeira]], but educated in England at [[St. Edmund's College, Ware]]. In 1963 took part in an expedition to the [[Savage Islands]]. He returned in 1967, building a house and studying the breeding biology of [[Cory's Shearwater]]s ''Calonectris diomedea''. This led to the governmental protection of the birds and the inclusion of the islands in the [[Parque Natural de Madeira]] in 1986.
Zino was born in [[Madeira]], but educated in England at [[St. Edmund's College, Ware]]. In 1963 took part in an expedition to the [[Savage Islands]]. He returned in 1967, building a house and studying the breeding biology of [[Cory's Shearwater]]s ''Calonectris diomedea''. This led to the governmental protection of the birds and the inclusion of the islands in the [[Parque Natural de Madeira]] in 1986.


Zino also visited the [[Desertas Islands]], studying the [[Fea's Petrel]]s ''Pterodroma feae'' and rediscovering the smaller ''P. madeira'' which had first been discovered in 1903.
Zino also visited the [[Desertas Islands]], studying the [[Fea's Petrel]]s ''Pterodroma feae''. This led to an interest in the smaller ''P. madeira'' which had first been discovered in 1903 on Madeira itself. Zino managed to rediscover the location of the colony, and protect it.


==Reference==
==Reference==

Revision as of 09:04, 16 May 2007

Paul Alexander Zino (9 February 1916 - 3 March 2004) was a Portuguese ornithologist after whom Zino's Petrel (Pterodroma madeira) is named.

Zino was born in Madeira, but educated in England at St. Edmund's College, Ware. In 1963 took part in an expedition to the Savage Islands. He returned in 1967, building a house and studying the breeding biology of Cory's Shearwaters Calonectris diomedea. This led to the governmental protection of the birds and the inclusion of the islands in the Parque Natural de Madeira in 1986.

Zino also visited the Desertas Islands, studying the Fea's Petrels Pterodroma feae. This led to an interest in the smaller P. madeira which had first been discovered in 1903 on Madeira itself. Zino managed to rediscover the location of the colony, and protect it.

Reference

The story of his life in The Telegraph