About: Birds of the Jungle Canopy   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Related to the carrion parrots, the martial parrot (1) is a handsome macaw-like bird. Skull Island has its own wood-pecking bird. The dark-wing (2) is not a true woodpecker but a species of broadbill, an example of convergent evolution. Likewise, the tiny brightbird (5) is a hummingbird analog related to Indonesian swifts. The handsome bluish Skull Island hawks (6) and venom-resistant hornbills (3) are predators of the treetops (the hornbill in particular eating centipedes like Idolon venefaucus while the hawk can adeptly pluck an aerosaur out of the air in midflight), while the ornately adorned dapper crow (4) is an opportunist, taking whatever morsels it can find, plant matter and smaller animals.

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • Birds of the Jungle Canopy
rdfs:comment
  • Related to the carrion parrots, the martial parrot (1) is a handsome macaw-like bird. Skull Island has its own wood-pecking bird. The dark-wing (2) is not a true woodpecker but a species of broadbill, an example of convergent evolution. Likewise, the tiny brightbird (5) is a hummingbird analog related to Indonesian swifts. The handsome bluish Skull Island hawks (6) and venom-resistant hornbills (3) are predators of the treetops (the hornbill in particular eating centipedes like Idolon venefaucus while the hawk can adeptly pluck an aerosaur out of the air in midflight), while the ornately adorned dapper crow (4) is an opportunist, taking whatever morsels it can find, plant matter and smaller animals.
dcterms:subject
abstract
  • Related to the carrion parrots, the martial parrot (1) is a handsome macaw-like bird. Skull Island has its own wood-pecking bird. The dark-wing (2) is not a true woodpecker but a species of broadbill, an example of convergent evolution. Likewise, the tiny brightbird (5) is a hummingbird analog related to Indonesian swifts. The handsome bluish Skull Island hawks (6) and venom-resistant hornbills (3) are predators of the treetops (the hornbill in particular eating centipedes like Idolon venefaucus while the hawk can adeptly pluck an aerosaur out of the air in midflight), while the ornately adorned dapper crow (4) is an opportunist, taking whatever morsels it can find, plant matter and smaller animals.
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