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  1. Capercaillie au FIL de Lorient en 1995. Capercaillie est un groupe de musique folk écossais, de renommée internationale, fondé en 1983 par Dòmhnall Seathach (anglais : Donald Shaw), Marc Duff, Joan MacLachlan, Shaun Craig et Martin MacLeod, qui trouve son inspiration dans le répertoire traditionnel celtique.. Le nom "Capercaillie" est l'anglicisation du gaélique écossais capall-coille ...

  2. Western capercaillies are social birds; hens and their yearling chicks live in small flocks while adult cocks are almost always solitary. Adult cocks are strongly territorial and occupy a range of 50-60 hectares (120-150 acres) optimal habitat. Hen territories are about 40 hectares (100 acres).

  3. The capercaillie is one of three bird species that is restricted to pinewood habitat in northern Scotland (the other two are the crested tit ( Parus cristatus ), and the Scottish crossbill ( Loxia scotia )). It prefers old, open pine forests with lush ericaceous ground cover, though in summer it is occasionally found in mature oakwoods.

  4. There are eight subspecies of the western capercaillie with marginal differences between each, mainly confined to size and subtle changes in plumage. The bird is found from Scandinavia and Finland in the west of Europe, south to Scotland and Spain then eastwards through France, Germany, Austria, Poland, Belarus, Ukraine, Kazakhstan and western and central Russia.

  5. The male Western Capercaillie, or cock, is a majestic bird with a length ranging from 74 to 85 centimeters and a wingspan stretching from 90 to 125 centimeters. Weighing an average of 4.1 kilograms, the cock boasts dark grey to dark brown body feathers and a lustrous dark metallic green on the breast. The belly and undertail coverts show a ...

  6. カパーケリー(Capercaillie)はドナルド・ショー(Donald Shaw)により1980年代に設立され、カレン・マシスン(Karen Matheson)がヴォーカルを務める スコットランド民族音楽 (英語版) バンド。

  7. 25 de feb. de 2022 · There has been a marked reduction in the geographical range of the Capercaillie in Scotland since the 1970’s, which has continued since the last national survey in 2015-16. If current trends continue it is likely that Capercaillie will be lost from Deeside & Donside, Moray & Nairn and Perthshire within the next 10-15 years.