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  2. Kite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kite

    Kite maker from India, image from Travels in India, including Sinde and the Punjab by H. E. Lloyd, 1845. Kite flying is popular in many Asian countries, where it often takes the form of "kite fighting", in which participants try to snag each other's kites or cut other kites down. [53]

  3. Kite (bird) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kite_(bird)

    Kite is the common name for certain birds of prey in the family Accipitridae, particularly in the subfamilies Elaninae and Perninae and certain genera within Buteoninae. [1] The term is derived from Old English cȳta (“kite; bittern”), [ 2 ] possibly from the onomatopoeic Proto-Indo-European root * gū- , "screech."

  4. Yellow-billed kite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yellow-billed_Kite

    The yellow-billed kite (Milvus aegyptius) is the Afrotropic counterpart of the black kite (Milvus migrans), of which it is most often considered a subspecies.However, DNA studies suggest that the yellow-billed kite differs significantly from black kites in the Eurasian clade, and should be considered as a separate, allopatric species.

  5. Kite types - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kite_types

    powered scale and manned Distinguish a product that is not a kite (called RC Kite) from true kites that have radio controls on a kite-lined kite wing. Ram-air kites Sled kites with ram-air cavities and Jalbert parafoil power kites are ram-air kites. The wind rams into the cavities and inflates sections of a kite to give the kite shape and ...

  6. Mississippi kite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mississippi_kite

    A Mississippi kite looks at a bee caught in midair. The diet of the Mississippi kite consists mostly of larger-bodied invertebrates and insects (which they capture in-flight), seasonally feeding on a variety of cicadas, crickets, grasshoppers and locusts and other crop-damaging insects, making them agriculturally and economically beneficial for ...

  7. Hook-billed kite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hook-billed_kite

    The hook-billed kite (Chondrohierax uncinatus), is a bird of prey in the family Accipitridae, which also includes many other diurnal raptors such as kites, eagles, and harriers. It occurs in the Americas , including the Rio Grande Valley of Texas in the United States , Mexico , the Caribbean , Central America , and tropical South America .

  8. White-tailed kite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White-tailed_kite

    For some recent decades, it was lumped with the black-winged kite of Europe and Africa as Elanus caeruleus and was collectively called black-shouldered kite. [4] However, the American Ornithologists’ Union accepted a more recent argument that the white-tailed kite differed from the Old-World species in size, shape, plumage, and behavior, and ...

  9. Kite applications - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kite_applications

    The spiders that kite to disperse (so-called ballooning spiders) have been found in nets raised to upper air for collecting; [42] the method is noted carefully in Spider Ballooning: Development and Evaluation of Field Trapping Methods (Araneae) [43] Balloon kite of the so-called ballooning spiderlings; the spiders' kite is not a balloon.