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  2. Blue bird-of-paradise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_Bird-of-paradise

    The blue bird-of-paradise was formally described in 1886 by the German naturalists Otto Finsch and Adolf Bernhard Meyer. They placed the bird in a new genus Paradisornis and coined the binomial name Paradisornis rudolphi. [2] The genus name Paradisornis combines the Ancient Greek paradeisos meaning "paradise" with ornis meaning "bird".

  3. Vogelkop lophorina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vogelkop_lophorina

    It is a small, approximately 26 cm (about 10 inches) long, (passerine) bird. The male is black with an iridescent green crown, blue-green breast cover, and a long velvety black erectile cape covering his back. The female is a reddish-brown bird with brownish-barred buff below. The young is similar to the female.

  4. This Bird’s Mating Dance is Disco-Worthy - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/bird-mating-dance-disco...

    Mating dances are not unusual in the bird kingdom, but the displays put on by birds of paradise are mesmerizing. The male bird in the above clip is doing his best to impress a female, and the ...

  5. Lophorina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lophorina

    All three species have a distinctive cape found on the nape that they push forward, an iridescent blue-green crown, and an iridescent blue-greenish breast shield that appears to be "smiling" (L. superba) and "frowning" (L. niedda) that the males use to court females. When it comes to the courtship of the female lophorina, males tend to start ...

  6. Greater lophorina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greater_lophorina

    It is a small, approximately 26 cm (about 10 inches) long, passerine bird. The greater lophorina is a dimorphic species. [12] The male is black with an iridescent green crown, blue-green breast cover, and a long velvety black erectile cape covering his back. The female is a reddish-brown bird with brownish-barred buff below.

  7. Lawes's parotia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lawes's_Parotia

    The male is a velvet black bird with an erectile silvery white forehead crest, iridescent purple blue nape and golden green breast plumes [3] which are structurally colored. The breast plumes have V-shaped barbules, creating thin-film microstructures that strongly reflect two different colors, bright blue-green and orange-yellow.

  8. Wilson's bird-of-paradise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilson's_bird-of-paradise

    The male is a red and black bird-of-paradise, with a yellow mantle on its neck, light green mouth, rich blue feet, and two curved violet tail feathers. The head is naked blue, with a black double cross pattern on it. The female is a brownish bird with a bare blue crown.

  9. Paradisaea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paradisaea

    A 2009 study examining the mitochondrial DNA of the family found that the Paradisaea birds-of-paradise were in a clade with the genus Cicinnurus. It showed that the blue bird-of-paradise was a sister taxon to all the other species in this genus. [3] All are large, and sexually dimorphic.