The pheasant is a very interesting bird. My first point, The pheasants are at risk of endangerment. Secondly, There are approximately 49 different types of the pheasant. Last, Some of the most beautiful birds are classed in the pheasant family. With these points I hope that you can agree that the pheasant is a very interesting bird. My first point pheasants are becoming endangered is true. It is from many things though. Such as Fox, raccoon, skunk, feral cats, hawk, Owl, and humans. Also the survival rate of these birds at hatch is 50%! These all are reasons that the pheasant is becoming endangered. Now there is a way to fix this though. People can raise their own pheasants. Although that you do need a license to raise them it is worth it. …show more content…
Those include our pheasant the ring-necked pheasant. They are very many sources that will tell you more about these various birds. Some of them might surprise you! You see all pheasants look very different. Only a few will look similar. One pheasant looks like a peacock! So see what you can find. Look at the pictures of these amazing birds! Believe it or not but some of the most beautiful birds are classed in the pheasant family. There are various colors in the pheasant family. Some of the colors include blue, gold, yellow, purple, red, green, white, tan, and black. Some of the most beautiful pheasants include the Golden Pheasant, Impeyan Pheasant, Tragopan Pheasant, Lady Amherst Pheasant, and Ring-neck Pheasant. These all are very impressive birds. If you want to lean more google the most beautiful pheasants and these names will come up. One of the most beautiful pheasants is our own bird found in our local areas. That bird would be the ring-necked pheasant. Now you do know why I say that the pheasant is a very interesting bird. With these three points above that all supported my thoughts about why the are so intriguing. With this I hope that you too will agree with me. If you want to know more about these very amazing birds you can find many sites that can tell you more. Also maybe visit a local zoo and see the birds in
The Northern Cardinal, in the family Cardinalidae, is a stunning bird that lives mostly in the southeastern area of the United States. The purpose of this paper is to inform you about its nesting, mating, and eating habits, its range, migration, habitat, predators and body structure. This bird is extremely unique and there is so much to learn about its amazing qualities.
Have you ever seen a huge vulture flying overhead? Well, most likely your answer is no because many of the vulture species are critically endangered. This means that there is a high risk that these birds could go extinct. Many people consider these birds ugly compared to other animals and they don’t care about them as much. But this species is very important to our ecosystem because they eat things that have already died and they clean it up. In the article “Vulture Culture: Conservationists Hope to Revamp Threatened Birds’ Image” by Associated Press (adapted by Newsela staff) African Vulture biologists hope to change the view people have about these amazing birds and save them from extinction. African Vultures are very rare
There are encounters with several birds throughout the majority of the stories: there is, of course, the sparrow that predicts Ewen MacLeod's death; there is Grandmother Connor's perpetually silent canary, Birdy; there are the hauntingly-voiced loons in the appropriately named story 'The Loons'. They make subtler appearances as well: Grandmother MacLeod's hair is once described as 'white-feathered wings in [a] snare'2; there is the blue Chinese carpet 'with its birds in eternal motionless flight'(p. 47); the ladybird that climbs, falls, and climbs again, despite its ability to fly.
Some birds here include the dove, duck, and perdiz, which looks like a partridge. The giant condor, Chile's national bird, is sometimes seen in the Andes, while the vulture of Tierra del Fuego preys upon the sheep of the far southern region of Chile.
The wetlands of spring welcomes migrating shorebird species, including sandpipers, stilts, plovers, dunlins, curlews, and avocets. The colors of summer come alive with an array of birds atop trees with beautiful sounds filling the air. These include black-chinned, calliope, broad-tailed, red-tailed hawk, white-crowned sparrow, tanager and rufous hummingbird. Cranes and geese make their appearance in early fall, coyotes, northern shovelers dabble on the water, javelina, and mule deer idle or prance about in the open meadow, and wild turkeys trek in their roosting
The whooping crane was endangered in 1967. Although believed to be rare, the crane has suffered major population damage to habitat destruction and
The adult Great Blue Heron is a blue-gray color. They have a black stripe above their yellow eyes. The stripe extends to the back of the neck turning into a plume of feathers like a ponytail. They have gray, shaggy neck feathers with streaks of white, black, and rust-brown. They
There's a little bird endemic to the United States that's in big trouble, particularly in the East Coast. Scientists fear that the saltmarsh sparrow could go extinct in as little as five decades.
It has a dark green color, which allows it to blend in with the bushes and other vegetation around it. This helps it because it can also sneak up on its prey and hide from predators. Since it is able to fly very high, they build their nests high up in the trees by the river. This provides its chicks with plenty of protection from predators on the ground. This can also pose a threat for the hawk’s chicks since there is a possibility that a chick can fall out of the nest. This is very unlikely to happen, since the mother hawk is always reinforcing the nest with various twigs found along the riverbank once the chicks have hatched, while the male hawk watches over the baby birds or catches food for them. The female river hawk lays the eggs, which must be kept warm and dry in order for the unborn chick to survive. The nest also must be reinforced when the mother it incubating her eggs or they could fall. Generally, these river hawks are pretty well-behaved and they have really good
Did you know the ringneck pheasant doesn't like to fly even though it is a bird? Weird,right? They have such short wings that set them apart from other birds. I can tell you more about the ringneck pheasant, like their characteristics and habitat. Their origin and diet are also things I am familiar with.
The birds live in many areas in the United States--around freshwater and seawater. They are birds of prey with a wingspan of 60’’. They are white bodied with a black stripe coming from their eye to their wings which are black also.
is a large seabird, has a long gray bill, long pointed tail, and has white feathers all over
Do people usually know what national birds mean in their country? It is common to hear that people all over the world do not care about those little animals that represent their idiosyncrasy and culture. Those people; however, are wrong. Knowing what a national bird represents is helpful to characterize a country because of the freedom wishes, strength and joyment that it can symbolize.
Here are some of the features of the Red Cockaded Woodpecker these Woodpeckers have this special tongue that poisons the tree and makes it softer and they're tongue also helps them eat the little bugs that are inside the tree and their tongue their tongues are abnormally longer than other birds. The Red Cockaded Woodpeckers also have these little red feathers on the back of his neck majority of their body is black and white (which kinda contradicts their whole name) the males have this little tiny red steak on the back of its neck the female red cockaded are a little skinnier than the male Woodpecker.
There are almost as many ways of flying as there are kinds of birds. Albatrosses glide and soar with long narrow wings stretched out, sometimes staying aloft for hours without a single wing beat. Hummingbirds, on the other hand, can 't rest their wings for even a second in flight. Woodpeckers have a swooping flight, crows fly in a straight line, and swallows dart and weave every which way.