Gull Description and morphology - Search results - Wiki Gull Description And Morphology
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Gulls, or colloquially seagulls, are seabirds of the family Laridae in the suborder Lari. They are most closely related to the terns and skimmers and... |
in genetics, morphology and vocalizations. Though "mew gull" was formerly used as a name for Larus canus sensu lato in North America and not commonly... |
Halcyornis (category Articles with short description) and described in 1825 as Larus toliapicus and characterised as a small gull. This was the first time a fossil bird received a scientific description.... |
Species (redirect from Morphological species) scientific name. The description typically provides means for identifying the new species, which may not be based solely on morphology (see cryptic species)... |
Mormon cricket (category Articles with short description) its common name from the prominent role it played in the miracle of the gulls, after the Mormon settlers in Utah had encountered them while pushing westward... |
The ivory gull (Pagophila eburnea) is a small gull, the only species in the genus Pagophila. It breeds in the high Arctic and has a circumpolar distribution... |
plumage, morphology and vocalizations. Though 'mew gull' has been used as name for the species in North America, the name short-billed gull was chosen... |
Laridae (category Articles with short description) seabirds in the order Charadriiformes that includes the gulls, terns, noddies, skimmers, and kittiwakes. It includes around 100 species arranged into... |
Trypanosomatida (category Articles with short description) PMC 2686837. PMID 15654017. Matthews KR, Gull K; Gull (June 1994). "Evidence for an interplay between cell cycle progression and the initiation of differentiation... |
Ring species (category Articles with short description) 6: L. smithsonianus, 7: L. argentatus Herring gull (Larus argentatus) (front) and lesser black-backed gull (Larus fuscus) (behind) in Norway: two phenotypes... |
Subspecies (category Articles with short description) populations that live in different areas and vary in size, shape, or other physical characteristics (morphology), but that can successfully interbreed.... |
Tern (category Articles with short description) thicker-billed gulls. Behaviour and morphology suggest that the terns are more closely related to the gulls than to the skimmers or skuas, and although Charles... |
Bivalvia (category Articles with short description) herring gull (Larus argentatus) sometimes drops heavy shells onto rocks in order to crack them open. Sea otters feed on a variety of bivalve species and have... |
Mole snake (category Articles with short description) of Spheniscus demersus (African penguin), Larus hartlaubii (Harlaub's gull), and Numida meleagris (helmeted guinea-fowl). Juveniles were observed eating... |
The white-eyed gull (Ichthyaetus leucophthalmus) is a small gull that is endemic to the Red Sea. Its closest relative is the sooty gull. The species is... |
Pomarine jaeger (category Articles with short description) resolved; its mitochondrial DNA is most similar to the great skua, but from morphology and behavior, it is closer to the lesser skuas (such as the parasitic jaeger)... |
Albatross (category Articles with short description) genetically and through morphological characteristics, size, their legs, and the arrangement of their nasal tubes (see below: Morphology and flight). Within... |
Bird hybrid (category Articles with short description) because of it. In gulls, Western × Glaucous-winged Gulls (known as "Olympic Gulls") are particularly common; these hybrids are fertile and may be more evolutionarily... |
Babesia (category Articles with short description) South Africa and the little penguin (Eduyptula minor) from southern Australia. Babesia bennetti was associated from the yellow-legged gull (Larus cachinnans)... |
Little auk (category Articles with short description) areas, or into the North Sea, and can cause wrecking of these birds, along with other seabirds, on-land. The glaucous gull and the Arctic fox are the main... |