Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
By shaking its wings 100 times a second, the club-winged manakin can produce around 1,400 single sounds during that time. [5] In order to withstand the repeated beating of its wings together, the club-winged manakin has evolved solid wing bones (by comparison, the bones of most birds are hollow, making flight easier).
Many manakin species have spectacular lekking courtship rituals, which are especially elaborate in the genera Pipra and Chiroxiphia. The rituals are characterized by a unique, species-specific pattern of vocalizations and movements such as jumping, bowing, wing vibration, wing snapping, and acrobatic flight. [ 6 ]
Club-winged manakin: Colombia and northwestern Ecuador. Machaeropterus regulus: Kinglet manakin: Atlantic Forest of south eastern Brazil Machaeropterus striolatus (split from M. regulus) Striolated manakin: Colombia, east Ecuador, east Peru and west Amazonian Brazil,Venezuela and west Guyana Machaeropterus eckelberryi: Painted manakin: north ...
Golden-winged laughingthrush; Golden-winged manakin; Golden-winged parakeet; Golden-winged sparrow; Golden-winged sunbird; Golden-winged tody-flycatcher; Golden-winged warbler; Goldenface; Goldie's bird-of-paradise; Goldie's lorikeet; Goldman's warbler; Goliath coucal; Goliath heron; Goliath imperial pigeon; Gorgeous bushshrike; Gorgeous ...
Club-winged manakin; F. Fiery-capped manakin; K. Kinglet manakin; P. Painted manakin; S. Striolated manakin This page was last edited on 31 March 2013, at 11:45 ...
But we have no song to go with the picture! For requested audio of animals, (e.g., crickets, bees, snakes, bats, etc.), articles may be tagged with {{Animal requested audio}} to include them in this category. The Xeno-canto database has many sounds that can be included in articles using the {} template.
The helmeted manakin has a sonorous song that has been likened to that of a cotinga. [9] [10] The male song is a whistle composed of eight notes. [9] The song is loud enough to be perceived by the human ear up to 100m away in the forest. [9] Males sing year-round, but song-intensity is highest from July to November. [9]
"Beggin '" is a song composed by Bob Gaudio and Peggy Farina and first released as a single by American band the Four Seasons in 1967. Initially charting at number 16 in the US Billboard Chart, the song became popular in the Northern soul scene in the United Kingdom in the 1970s.