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  2. Common tern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_tern

    The common tern [2] (Sterna hirundo) is a seabird in the family Laridae. This bird has a circumpolar distribution, its four subspecies breeding in temperate and subarctic regions of Europe, Asia and North America. It is strongly migratory, wintering in coastal tropical and subtropical regions. Breeding adults have light grey upperparts, white ...

  3. Common terns fledge in Erie for the first time in 60 ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/common-terns-fledge-erie-first...

    The game commission believes since 2012, 21 common tern nests have been started there but failed. Brian Whipkey is the outdoors columnist for USA TODAY Network sites in Pennsylvania.

  4. Sterna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sterna

    Common tern: Sterna hirundo: Europe, North Africa, Asia east to western Siberia and Kazakhstan, and North America. Roseate tern: Sterna dougallii: Atlantic coasts of Europe and North America, and winters south to the Caribbean and west Africa. White-fronted tern: Sterna striata: New Zealand and Australia Black-naped tern: Sterna sumatrana

  5. Tern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tern

    Common tern in flight Common tern in flight. Terns are seabirds in the family Laridae, subfamily Sterninae, that have a worldwide distribution and are normally found near the sea, rivers, or wetlands. Terns are treated in eleven genera in a subgroup of the family Laridae, which also includes several genera of gulls and the skimmers (Rynchops ...

  6. Longipenis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longipenis

    This article on a moth of the family Lecithoceridae is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  7. South American tern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_American_tern

    The South American tern (Sterna hirundinacea) is a species of tern found in coastal regions of southern South America, including the Falkland Islands, ranging north to Peru (Pacific coast) and Brazil (Atlantic coast). It is generally the most common tern in its range. The smaller, highly migratory common tern closely resembles it. The specific ...

  8. Onychoprion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Onychoprion

    The sooty tern has a pan-tropical distribution; the bridled tern also breeds across the Tropical Atlantic and Indian Ocean but in the central Pacific it is replaced by the spectacled tern. The Aleutian tern breeds around Alaska and Siberia but winters in the tropics around South East Asia .

  9. Forster's tern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forster's_tern

    Forster's tern is a member of the gull and tern family Laridae; it has also been treated like other terns in their own family Sternidae by some authors. Forster's tern was named by Thomas Nuttall in honor of Johann Reinhold Forster, the German naturalist who first suggested it differed from the common tern. [5]