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安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
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- Nightjars – Identification, Habitat More [Family Guide]
The Buff-collared Nightjar lives in rocky canyons with mesquite and other scrubby vegetation In the USA, most are seen at California Gulch and a few other spots in southern Arizona
- Nightjar | Nocturnal, Migratory, Camouflage | Britannica
nightjar, any of about 60 to 70 species of birds that make up the subfamily Caprimulginae of the family Caprimulgidae and sometimes extended to include the nighthawks, subfamily Chordeilinae (see nighthawk)
- Nightjar Bird Facts | Caprimulgus Europaeus
Their grey-brown, mottled, streaked and stripey plumage provides ideal camouflage in the daytime They have an almost supernatural reputation thanks to their silent flight and their mythical ability to steal milk from goats The first indication that a Nightjar is near is usually the male's churring song, rising and falling
- Nightjars | Audubon
Nightjars Antillean Nighthawk Nightjars Buff-collared Nightjar Nightjars Chuck-will's-widow Nightjars
- Nightjar Bird Facts - Caprimulgus ruficollis, Eurostopodus argus, and . . .
The nightjar (Caprimulgidae) belongs to the Caprimulgiformes order in the Caprimulgidae family They are also called nighthawks and bugeaters; the term “nightjar” is typically used in Europe, while the New World species are referred to as “nighthawks ”
- Field Guide for all the Birds of North America
There are at least five different groups in the nightjar family seen in North America These include the whip-poor-wills, Common Poorwill, Common Pauraque, Chuck-will's-widow, Buff-collared Nightjar and the nighthawks
- NIGHTJARS | Nightjar Survey Net
NIGHTJARS NSN gathers observations of 9 Nightjar species found in the United States View the profiles below to view each species and listen recordings of vocalizations Click on the map icons to view larger range maps (provided by Birds of the World) Want to test your abilities to identify North American nightjars by ear? Take the Quiz!
- Buff-collared Nightjar Identification, All About Birds, Cornell Lab of . . .
Fairly large, rather pale grayish nightjar of scrubby woodlands, thorn forests, edges and adjacent clearings in western Mexico Hunts mainly from perches at forest edge and from the ground
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