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  2. Superb fairywren - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superb_fairywren

    The superb fairywren (Malurus cyaneus) is a passerine bird in the Australasian wren family, Maluridae, and is common and familiar across south-eastern Australia. It is a sedentary and territorial species, also exhibiting a high degree of sexual dimorphism; the male in breeding plumage has a striking bright blue forehead, ear coverts, mantle, and tail, with a black mask and black or dark blue ...

  3. Portal:Birds/Selected species/4 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Birds/Selected...

    The superb fairy-wren (Malurus cyaneus), also known as superb blue-wren or colloquially as blue wren, is a passerine bird of the family Maluridae. Sedentary and territorial, it is found across southeastern Australia. The male in breeding plumage has a striking bright blue forehead, ear coverts, mantle and tail with a black mask and black or ...

  4. Splendid fairywren - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Splendid_fairywren

    Specimens were initially collected at King George Sound, and the splendid fairywren then described as Saxicola splendens by the French naturalists Jean René Constant Quoy and Joseph Paul Gaimard in 1830, [6] three years before John Gould gave it the scientific name of Malurus pectoralis and vernacular name of banded superb-warbler. [7]

  5. Australasian wren - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australasian_wren

    The Australasian wrens are a family, Maluridae, of small, insectivorous passerine birds endemic to Australia and New Guinea. While commonly known as wrens, they are unrelated to the true wrens . The family comprises 32 species (including sixteen fairywrens, three emu-wrens , and thirteen grasswrens ) in six genera.

  6. Purple-crowned fairywren - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Purple-crowned_fairywren

    Within the genus it is most closely related to the splendid fairywren and superb fairywren. [9] [10] It is also sometimes placed as a sister to clade including the two "blue wrens" along with the white-shouldered fairywren, white-winged fairywren, and the red-backed fairywren, also called the bicoloured wrens. [10] [11]

  7. Red-winged fairywren - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red-winged_fairywren

    Female helpers are much more common in this species than the other species intensively studied, the superb fairywren. [41] Over half of the groups have two or more helpers, often female, which feed nestlings and reduce the workload of breeding females. [ 42 ]

  8. Portal:Birds/Selected species/7 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Birds/Selected...

    The splendid fairy-wren (Malurus splendens), also known simply as the splendid wren or more colloquially in Western Australia as the blue wren, is a passerine bird of the family Maluridae. It is found across much of the Australian continent from central-western New South Wales and southwestern Queensland over to coastal Western Australia.

  9. Blue-breasted fairywren - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue-breasted_Fairywren

    Blue-breasted fairy-wren, Kings Park, Perth. The contact call is a soft, short reed-like trill. The alarm call is the typical Malurus short churring notes repeatedly spat out and taken up by all members of the group. The males have the least distinctive song of the Australasian wren family; a soft whirring, buzzing trill, usually given from a ...