Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Timex Group B.V., or Timex Group, is an American - Dutch holding company headquartered in Hoofddorp, the Netherlands and Middlebury, Connecticut. [ citation needed ] It is the corporate parent of several global watchmaking companies including Timex Group USA, Inc. , [ 1 ] TMX Philippines, Inc., and Timex Group India Ltd.
The tanagers (singular / ˈ t æ n ə dʒ ər /) comprise the bird family Thraupidae, in the order Passeriformes. The family has a Neotropical distribution and is the second-largest family of birds. It represents about 4% of all avian species and 12% of the Neotropical birds.
The International Ornithological Committee (IOC) recognizes these 392 tanager species in family Thraupidae, which are distributed among 107 genera. One species on the list, the St. Kitts bullfinch, is extinct.
The tooth-billed tanager is sometimes treated as part of a more broadly circumscribed hepatic tanager species, where it makes up the lutea subspecies group (highland hepatic tanager). [2] [3] However, the IOC World Bird List splits these birds into three species, also recognising Piranga hepatica (the hepatic tanager) and Piranga flava (the red ...
Metallic-green tanager is the official common name designated by the International Ornithologists' Union (IOC). [4] The metallic-green tanager is one of 27 species in the genus Tangara. It was previously thought to form a species group with the blue-browed and golden-naped tanagers.
Ramphocelus tanagers are found in semi-open areas. The nest is a cup built by the female of plant materials such as moss, rootlets, and strips of large leaves like banana or Heliconia , and is often in a fairly open site in a tree.
These species were formerly placed in the genus Tangara.A molecular phylogenetic study published in 2014 found that Tangara was polyphyletic. [2] In the rearrangement to create monophyletic genera, the genus, Stilpnia, was erected with the black-headed tanager as the type species.
the flava group (lowland hepatic tanager), resident in open woods elsewhere in South America. [7] The IOC recognises these subspecies as the species Piranga flava (the red tanager). [4] Piranga hepatica macconnelli C. Chubb, 1921 (southern Guyana, southern Suriname and northern Brazil) Piranga hepatica rosacea Todd, 1922 (eastern Bolivia)