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A structure of classification of animals
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When you first think of eyes you think of normal eyes people use to see things. But you never think of an animal, not only ,with eyes on their head but feathers too. Which brings me to one of the most famous peafowls, the Indian Blue. There are three types of Indian Blue Peafowls: The Peacock (male), Peahen (female), and Peachick (baby/offspring.) These Indian Blue Peafowls, like all, other animals belong in the biggest Kingdom, the Animal Kingdom. Like humans and other animals they have a Phylum which is a Chordata or having a backbone. Even if these peafowls don’t fly much, and when they do only to get away from predators and up into high places. They belong to the Class of Aves that translates into birds. Peafowls along with turkeys, pheasants, and quail are all commonly known to be Galiformes that are in the Phasianidae family. The Genus name of all peafowls is Pavo which translates into peafowl. The species name for these birds are the Pavo Cristatus which again, means peafowl and crested. The common name for this bird is the Indian Blue Peafowl (Indian Peafowl, 2011.) These Indian Blue peafowls are one of the most amazing birds around the world, there are many interesting physical traits, habitats, and facts
about these peafowls.
The Indian Blue Peacock is a swan-sized bird with a long slender neck and a train between 1.4-1.6m long. The Indian Blue are most notable for the male's extravagant tail also known as a train. The train is where all the peacocks feather is located at when they aren’t trying to find a mate. The train makes up about 60% of the peacock’s body length. The train is covered with blue-green feathers each adorned with an eye at the end of each feather. The plumage is also an iridescent blue-green col...
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...he female does not look the same. They have dull colors to help them camouflage while they are protecting their nest and chicks. The chicks also share the mother’s dull color to hide away from lurking predators.
The Indian Blue Peafowls are such exquisite birds it’s kind of shocking to know that they are not endangered. I thought people would surely have captured and stuffed them, then send the peafowls to museums. But it’s nice to know that’s not the case. Even if if the Indian Blues never originated in North America they are still well known across he world and are very interesting creatures. The reason behind me researching this animal is because when I was a kid I used to always be afraid of them but I was always awed by how pretty they looked. Now that I’m older and researched peafowls, I think they are adorable and nothing to be afraid of.
When people started to see the declining of wildlife animals include bison and many colorful birds; it cause a rise of conservation. A cause of the extermination of bison is “From the Great Slave Lake to the Rio Grande, the home of the buffalo was everywhere overrun by the man with a gun; and, as had ever been the case, the wild creatures were gradually swept away, the largest and most conspicuous forms being the first to go.”(Doc.2) And the new information about the number of beautiful birds used to furnish women’s hats caused further conservation movement. “It if high time for the whole civilized world to know that many of the most beautiful and remarkable birds of the world are now being exterminated to furnish millinery ornaments for womenswear. The mass of the new information that we have recently secured on this
Jain’s are known to carry around a brush of peacock feathers to brush away the small insects that may lie in their path. These feathers were never plucked from the peacock because that would cause harm to the bird. By dusting the ground or where they may place their body they ensure that they tried to remove anything that could ...
In Cold Mountain and "A Poem for the Blue Heron", tone is established in a multitude of ways. These two pieces of literature describe the characteristics and actions of a blue heron, both aiming for the same goal. However, Charles Frazier and Mary Oliver approach their slightly differing tones employing organization, metaphoric language, and diction.
Every day many species are slowly becoming either endangered or extinct and recently an endangered bird species called piping plovers, started nesting on Revere Beach. What would seem as a miraculous discovery, many are averse to their new inhabitants on the beach. Many Revere residents are complaining because the piping plovers now occupy parts of “their” beach. But in the article “Revere Beach should welcome the piping plover” The Editorial Board believes that the presence of the piping plover could be greatly beneficial to the city of Revere and I certainly agree. What led me to select this particular article is my concern for the many endangered species in the world like the piping plover. Human hands have led many species to become endangered
U.S. Department of the interior, National Park Service. (2013). Endangered Species. Retrieved from website: http://www.nature.nps.gov/biology/endangeredspecies/index.cfm
But guppies with less color have a hard time to mate which does not benefit him, but the less he stands out the more time he has to live.
In 1782, the bald eagle was elected as the national symbol of the United States of America, yet by the early 1960’s, it was nearly extinct in the Continental United States. A combination of many dangers, with the main danger being the pesticide DDT, the bald eagle was on the verge of extinction. Yet, through conservation measure applied by the United States government the bald eagle cam back from the brink and was taken off of the endangered species list in 2007.
Their shapes and patterns are similar with the majority displaying three wide stripes which are placed vertically across their bodies. The reason why these beautiful fish are known as peacock bass is because they all possess a spot on their tail fins that imitates the eye on a peacock’s feathers. The eye is used by both the peacock and the peacock fish, as a defense mechanism against predators. In addition, the eye can be used by the peacock fish as a lure of its own when
8. Taylor, Dan. 1998. Audubon Society Inspired to Action by Bird Die -offs . 17 Jan. 1998 . E-mail . Available bkus@sunstroke.sdsu.edu
color. They usually lay about 300 to 400 eggs per sac and have 4 to 9 egg
According to Myton Eells, the Western Indians’ concept of Thunderbird is a big bird that produces thunder. Eell also suggests other tribes and Makahs believe Thunderbird is two things instead of one, a giant and a bird. Indians are very superstitious to Thunderbird. The Indians believe if they own any parts of the bird they will have extraordinary str...
In the past hundred years, the human race has expanded almost everything in the United States of America, such as our agriculture practices, the size of our cities, and the sheer amount of expansion in business and it has affected one group of animals in particular, waterfowl. Due to these advancements, the human race has caused the climate to change, and according to an research by Jennifer Reilly “Climate change is an global problem that affects all species of waterfowl and the wetlands they inhabit” (Reilly 2017). Humans have impacted the life of waterfowl in such extreme levels of magnitude, that humans have almost become part of waterfowls life. Cites have become almost refuges for geese as mentioned in the study titled Survival
Volume 21. Connecticut: Grolier Inc, 1998. Simpson, George Gaylord. Penguins: Past and Present, Here and There. New Haven, Connecticut:
American Crows can reach a length between 17 to 21 inches, with a wingspan of 39 inches, while the Common Raven is a larger bird that has an average length of 24 inches (Burton et al. 2010; Marzluff et al, 2013). Both the American Crow and the Common Raven have black coloration, but their feathers and beaks differ. Common Ravens have a larger, stronger beak, a wedge-shaped tail, and spikey feathers on their throat. American Crows, on the other hand, have a smaller and less bulky bill, smooth throat feathers, and they have tail feathers that fan out instead of forming a wedge (Marzluff et al, 2013). The two birds have different styles of flying.
Most peregrines are slate blue on the back and wings. The top of its head is black. Black