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The propensity of the Japanese bush warbler to sing has led to the birds being kept as cage birds. Robert Young records that to encourage singing the cages of kept birds were covered with a wooden box with a small paper window that allowed only subdued light in. [4] Along with the return of the barn swallow the bush warbler's call is viewed by Japanese as a herald of springtime.
The female is the brighter of the sexes and initiates courtship. The male incubates the eggs and tends the young. ... Japanese bush warbler, ... As their name ...
The Japanese bush-warbler (Horornis diphone) probably belongs in a different genus. Bush-warblers (or bush warblers) are small insectivorous songbirds of the genera Cettia, Horornis, and Bradypterus. They were formerly placed in the "wastebin" Old World warbler family. None of the genera as traditionally delimited are believed to be ...
Common Name Scientific name Distribution Manchurian bush warbler: Horornis canturians: northeastern China. Japanese bush warbler: Horornis diphone: Japan Philippine bush warbler: Horornis seebohmi: Philippines. Palau bush warbler: Horornis annae: Palau. Shade bush warbler: Horornis parens: Solomon Islands Bougainville bush warbler: Horornis haddeni
Species in the genus Horornis, such as the famous uguisu (ιΆ―, Japanese bush warbler, H. diphone) and the brown-flanked bush warbler (H. fortipes) belong to a group that might include the aberrant broad-billed warbler (Tickellia hodgsoni). This latter species differs wildly in its gaudy colors but in habitus is a typical "bush warbler". [5] [6]
The female is the brighter of the sexes and initiates courtship. The male incubates the eggs and tends the young. ... Taiwan bush warbler, ... Japanese bush warbler, ...
There are a lot of great plant species for landscaping, both native and non-native.
Possible explanations for this adaptation include direct benefits to the female, such as superior parental care or territory defense, and indirect benefits, such as good genes for their offspring. [6] Japanese bush warbler songs from island populations have an acoustically simple structure when compared to mainland populations. [7]