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Subject Item
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rdfs:label
Spitfire bird Spitfire Bird
rdfs:comment
The spitfire bird is slightly bigger than the roachcutter, with bright orange flashes on its wings, and can often be seen hovering in front of a spitfire tree. It dips its head repeatedly into the flower from which it appears to be feeding. Suddenly, there may be a hum and flutter as the other residents of the forest canopy flee an approaching predator. But rather than darting away to safety, this bird faces the danger. As the predator draws near, the spitfire bird will lower its head. Then, at the last possible moment, it sprays a hot, corrosive acid from its nostrils. This defense strategy works very well against attacking hunters like falconflies. Spitfire Bird - Collects chemicals from Beech Burners, which when mixed are highly corrosive. When threatened they spit the chemicals at the assailant through their nostrils, which proves a powerful deterrent. They use orange patches under their wings to flash a warning at potential predators.
n51:
In the Antarctic forest
dcterms:subject
n4: n5: n7: n8: n10: n12: n16: n17: n18: n20: n21: n22: n24: n25: n26: n28: n29: n30: n31: n32: n33: n35: n37: n38: n40: n41: n42: n45: n48: n49: n50: n52: n55:
n23:
Spitfire Birds
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Flutter bird
n53:wikiPageUsesTemplate
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n46:wikiPageUsesTemplate
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n13:wikiPageUsesTemplate
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n43:wikiPageUsesTemplate
n44:
n36:
3.15576E15
n6:
Nectar from flowers
n15:
Sea birds or petrels – shearwater, fulmar, albatross
n27:
Size as Starling
n19:
Spitfire Beetle and Falconfly
n34:abstract
The spitfire bird is slightly bigger than the roachcutter, with bright orange flashes on its wings, and can often be seen hovering in front of a spitfire tree. It dips its head repeatedly into the flower from which it appears to be feeding. Suddenly, there may be a hum and flutter as the other residents of the forest canopy flee an approaching predator. But rather than darting away to safety, this bird faces the danger. As the predator draws near, the spitfire bird will lower its head. Then, at the last possible moment, it sprays a hot, corrosive acid from its nostrils. This defense strategy works very well against attacking hunters like falconflies. The spitfire bird does not actually feed from the spitfire tree flowers, but gather chemicals from them. Like its cousin the roachcutter, the spitfire bird actually feeds on small arthropods. The flowers it is particularly interested in are always that of the spitfire tree. The male and female of this type of tree produce different chemicals. Both are harvested by the spitfire bird and stored in a compartment of its throat, known as the crop. When faced with danger, the bird releases the chemicals, mixing them in a chamber in its nasal cavity and adding an enzyme from a gland in its skull. The enzyme unbinds the chemicals, which react violently with each other to produce the corrosive acid. The spitfire tree also benefits from the spitfire bird's plundering of its resources. As it hovers between the male and female trees, dipping its beak into their flowers, the bird aids pollination. The closely related false spitfire bird mimics the appearance of a true spitfire bird to protect itself from attackers. However, a spitfire bird can sometimes be fooled by a gang of four spitfire beetles pretending to be a spitfire tree flower. This sometimes works for the beetles and other predators, because spitfire birds only visit the spitfire tree flowers when they run out of chemicals. Spitfire Bird - Collects chemicals from Beech Burners, which when mixed are highly corrosive. When threatened they spit the chemicals at the assailant through their nostrils, which proves a powerful deterrent. They use orange patches under their wings to flash a warning at potential predators.