Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The northern cardinal (Cardinalis cardinalis), known colloquially as the common cardinal, red cardinal, or just cardinal, is a bird in the genus Cardinalis.It can be found in southeastern Canada, through the eastern United States from Maine to Minnesota to Texas, New Mexico, southern Arizona, southern California and south through Mexico, Belize, and Guatemala.
The red-crested cardinal is a medium-sized species showing a red head, with a red bib and a short red crest that the bird raises when excited. Belly, breast and undertail are white, with a gray back, wings, and tail. Wing coverts are gray, but the primaries, secondaries, and rectrices show a darker gray.
Doolittle tells Parade, "The deep crimson chest of a Cardinal connects with the red of the root chakra, as your consciousness rises, as you become more aware of the shifts and changes in your life ...
Banding studies show the cardinals can live up to 15 years in the wild. Until the Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918, cardinals were trapped and kept as cage birds for their color and song.
The adult red-capped cardinal is 16.5 cm (6.5 in) long and weighs about 22 g (0.78 oz). The nominate subspecies has a crimson head, blackish lores and ocular region, and shiny black upperparts, apart from a white partial collar extending up the neck sides from the white underparts.
Even with the name of Northern Cardinal, Cardinalis cardinalis, the beloved red bird is quintessentially a Southeastern native whose habitat now extends from Florida to southern Canada and west to ...
Cardinal or The Cardinal most commonly refers to Cardinalidae, a family of North and South American birds Cardinalis, genus of three species in the family Cardinalidae Northern cardinal, Cardinalis cardinalis, the common cardinal of eastern North America; Pyrrhuloxia or desert cardinal, Cardinalis sinuatus, found in southwest North America
The waxwings are a group of passerine birds with soft silky plumage and unique red tips to some of the wing feathers. In the Bohemian and cedar waxwings, these tips look like sealing wax and give the group its name. These are arboreal birds of northern forests. They live on insects in summer and berries in winter.