Ad
related to: chin tuck swallow
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
This mask covers the lores, ear coverts, chin and throat. [4] Upperparts are dark blue grey with a prominent white tip on the tail. The underbody is pale grey, fading to greyish white on under tail coverts. Legs and feet are grey to grey black or black. Adult females are similar to adult males but slightly browner and mask is indistinct. [3]
Edible bird's nests, also known as swallow nests (Chinese: 燕窝; pinyin: yànwō), are bird nests created from solidified saliva by edible-nest swiftlets, Indian swiftlets and other swiftlets of the genera Aerodramus, Hydrochous, Schoutedenapus and Collocalia, which are harvested for human consumption. Edible swiftlet nests, packaged for sale
Hawk tuah; Origin/etymology: June 2024 vox pop YouTube interview with a young American woman in the Broadway district of Nashville, Tennessee; onomatopoeic catchphrase: Meaning: The sound of spitting on a penis as a form of fellatio
Many of us are familiar with the iconic 1991 shot of Princess Diana, chin resting on her folded-over hands, wearing a black turtleneck, hair chopped short. The real story behind Princess Diana's ...
Golden swallow: Hispaniola and formerly Jamaica Tachycineta albilinea: Mangrove swallow: native to Mexico and all of Central America (Belize, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Costa Rica and Panama) Tachycineta leucorrhoa: White-rumped swallow: Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Paraguay, Peru, and Uruguay Tachycineta leucopyga: Chilean swallow
The northern rough-winged swallow usually nests by itself, [5] although sometimes it is found in loose groups, often at the edge of bank swallow colonies, [6] of up to 25 pairs. [5] The nests are found in burrows located in soil banks, [ 12 ] very occasionally caves and trees, and in human-made cavities such as gutters and tubes.
It is brown above, with blackish wings and tail and a pale grey rump. The throat and upper breast are rufous with the lower underparts yellowish-white. The tail is slightly forked. It is similar in appearance to its northern counterpart, the northern rough-winged swallow, but is more uniform in color, particularly on the rump. [3]
Woodswallows are soft-plumaged, somber-coloured passerine birds in the genus Artamus.The woodswallows are either treated as a subfamily, Artaminae, in an expanded family Artamidae (also including the subfamily Cracticinae), or as the only genus in that family (with the butcherbirds, currawongs, and allies placed in a separate family, Cracticidae).