On 27 March 2006 a living specimen was caught at the
Laem Phak Bia Environmental Research and Development Project in
Phetchaburi,
Thailand by ornithologist Philip Round of
Mahidol University. The bird was
ringed and two feathers were extracted; DNA from them was found to match the DNA of the 1867 specimen. Based on the short and rounded wings, earlier studies had suggested that the species was likely to be a short-distant migrant or a resident. The rediscoveries of a second museum specimen from a different location and the wild specimen from Thailand suggest that this may not be so. Some field identifications from West Bengal and central India were subsequently reported based on behaviour, but captured specimens did not appear to match the species. A breeding site of the large-billed reed warbler,
Acrocephalus orinus, was discovered in the
Wakhan Corridor of the
Pamir of north-eastern
Afghanistan by researcher Robert Timmins of the
Wildlife Conservation Society, who was studying avian communities in the Pamir Mountains. He came across a small brown warbler and recorded its song. Dr. Timmins did not realize the importance of his discovery until he visited a Natural History Museum in Tring, England. There he examined a specimen of a large-billed reed warbler, which looked identical to the bird he had seen and recorded. A team of ornithologists, including Afghan scientists of the
Wildlife Conservation Society, confirmed his discovery by capturing, sampling and releasing almost 20 specimens of the bird in 2009, the largest number ever recorded, using a combination of field observations, museum specimens, DNA sequencing, and also the first known audio recording of the species that were already made in 2008. A study by Russian ornithologists in 2011 indicated that the species had been misidentified as
A. dumetorum in museum collections and that the species may be breeding in Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, eastern Uzbekistan and south-eastern Kazakhstan. Nests were found in 2011 in the
Panj river valley, Tajikistan. == References == == External links ==