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  2. Lobed river mullet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lobed_river_mullet

    The lobed river mullet (Cestraeus plicatilis [2]), also known as ludong or banak, [3] is a freshwater mullet. While it is claimed to be endemic to Cagayan River and tributaries extending through the watersheds of Cagayan Valley and the Santa-Abra River Systems of Ilocos Sur and Abra in the Philippines, [4] verifiable and reliable sources have listed Celebes, New Caledonia, New Hebrides, and ...

  3. Cestraeus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cestraeus

    Cestraeus plicatilis. Valenciennes, 1836. Species; See text Cestraeus is a genus of mullets found in rivers of Asia and Oceania. Species

  4. Precociality and altriciality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Precociality_and_altriciality

    The span between precocial and altricial species is particularly broad in the biology of birds. Precocial birds hatch with their eyes open and are covered with downy feathers that are soon replaced by adult-type feathers. [17] Birds of this kind can also swim and run much sooner after hatching than altricial young, such as songbirds. [17]

  5. Mating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mating

    In some birds, it includes behaviors such as nest-building and feeding offspring. The human practice of mating and artificially inseminating domesticated animals is part of animal husbandry . In some terrestrial arthropods , including insects representing basal (primitive) phylogenetic clades, the male deposits spermatozoa on the substrate ...

  6. Nidulariaceae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nidulariaceae

    Commonly known as the bird's nest fungi, their fruiting bodies resemble tiny egg-filled birds' nests. As they are saprobic , feeding on decomposing organic matter , they are often seen growing on decaying wood and in soils enriched with wood chips or bark mulch ; they have a widespread distribution in most ecological regions.

  7. Human uses of birds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_uses_of_birds

    In mythology, birds were sometimes monsters, like the Roc and the Māori's Pouākai, a giant bird capable of snatching humans. [96] In Persian mythology, the simurgh was a gigantic bird, the first to come into existence, and it nested on the tree of plant life that grew in the great ocean beside the tree of immortality.

  8. Tim Birkhead - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tim_Birkhead

    Bird Sense: What it Is Like to Be a Bird, Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 2012, ISBN 978-1-4088-2013-1 was rated best natural history book of 2012 by the Independent and Guardian Newspapers, and was awarded a Best Bird Book of 2012 prize by British Birds and the British Trust for Ornithology, and was short-listed for the Royal Society Winton Book ...

  9. Avemetatarsalia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avemetatarsalia

    Avemetatarsalia (meaning "bird metatarsals") is a clade of diapsid reptiles containing all archosaurs more closely related to birds than to crocodilians. [2] The two most successful groups of avemetatarsalians were the dinosaurs and pterosaurs.