enow.com Web Search

  1. Ad

    related to: english names for purple birds of the world

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Birds of the World: Recommended English Names - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birds_of_the_World:...

    Birds of the World: Recommended English Names is a paperback book, written by Frank Gill and Minturn Wright on behalf of the International Ornithologists' Union. The book is an attempt to produce a standardized set of English names for all bird species, and it is the product of a project set in motion at the 1990 International Ornithological ...

  3. Birds of the World - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birds_of_the_World

    Birds of the World (BoW) is an online database of ornithological data adapted from the Handbook of the Birds of the World and contemporary reference works, including Birds of North America, Neotropical Birds Online, and Bird Families of the World. [2] The database is published and maintained by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and collects data ...

  4. Purple martin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Purple_martin

    P. subis. Binomial name. Progne subis. ( Linnaeus, 1758) Orange: breeding; yellow: migration; blue: nonbreeding. Synonyms. Hirundo subisLinnaeus, 1758. The purple martin ( Progne subis) is a passerine bird in the swallow family Hirundinidae. It is the largest swallow in North America.

  5. Turaco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turaco

    The turacos make up the bird family Musophagidae ( / ˌmjuːzoʊˈfædʒɪdiː / "banana-eaters"), which includes plantain-eaters and go-away-birds. In southern Africa both turacos and go-away-birds are commonly known as loeries. They are semi-zygodactylous: the fourth (outer) toe can be switched back and forth. The second and third toes, which ...

  6. Tanager - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tanager

    Description[edit] Tanagers are small to medium-sized birds. The shortest-bodied species, the white-eared conebill, is 9 cm (4 in) long and weighs 6 g (0.2 oz), barely smaller than the short-billed honeycreeper. The longest, the magpie tanager is 28 cm (11 in) and weighs 76 g (2.7 oz). The heaviest is the white-capped tanager, which weighs 114 g ...

  7. List of birds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_birds

    List of birds. Penguins. Ostriches. This article lists living orders and families of birds. The links below should then lead to family accounts and hence to individual species. The passerines (perching birds) alone account for well over 5,000 species. In total there are about 10,000 species of birds described worldwide, though one estimate of ...

  8. Eclectus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eclectus

    Eclectus. Eclectus is a genus of parrot, the Psittaciformes, which consists of four known extant species known as eclectus parrots and the extinct Eclectus infectus, the oceanic eclectus parrot. The extant eclectus parrots are medium-sized parrots native to regions of Oceania, particularly New Guinea and Australia.

  9. Purple honeycreeper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Purple_honeycreeper

    The purple honeycreeper (Cyanerpes caeruleus) is a small Neotropical bird in the tanager family Thraupidae. It is found in the tropical New World from Colombia and Venezuela south to Brazil, and on Trinidad .

  10. Coraciidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coraciidae

    Coraciidae. Coraciidae ( / kɒrəˈsaɪ.ɪdiː /) is a family of Old World birds, which are known as rollers because of the aerial acrobatics some of these birds perform during courtship or territorial flights. Rollers resemble crows in size and build, and share the colourful appearance of kingfishers and bee-eaters, blues and pinkish or ...

  11. Flamingo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flamingo

    The name flamingo comes from Portuguese or Spanish flamengo ("flame-colored"), which in turn comes from Provençal flamenc – a combination of flama ("flame") and a Germanic-like suffix -ing. The word may also have been influenced by the Spanish ethnonym flamenco ("Fleming" or "Flemish"). The name of the genus, Phoenicopterus, is from the ...