frogmouth การใช้
- Tawny frogmouths are common in suburbs, having adapted to human presence.
- Tawny frogmouths also make distinctive drumming noises during breeding season.
- The frogmouths are a group of nocturnal birds related to the nightjars.
- The Papuan frogmouth is the largest of frogmouths in terms of length.
- The Papuan frogmouth is the largest of frogmouths in terms of length.
- No other frogmouth found in Borneo is more than 30 cm in length.
- The owlet-nightjars are small nocturnal birds related to the nightjars and frogmouths.
- Many taxonomists consider it to be a subspecies of the short-tailed frogmouth.
- Besides owls, bat hawks, frogmouths and nightjars also display good night vision.
- The first group also found a tawny frogmouth.
- Wildlife includes brushtailed possums, ducks and ducklings in spring, tawny frogmouths, kookaburras.
- Potoos are a group of large near passerine birds related to the nightjars and frogmouths.
- Animals in the park include marbled frogmouth, koala, Albert lyrebird and rainforest reptiles and frogs.
- One frequent prey item is the tawny frogmouth, a nocturnal bird of Australian forests and woodlands.
- The tawny frogmouth is smaller on average than this but is capable of reaching higher maximum weights.
- The "'frogmouths "'are a group of nocturnal birds related to the nightjars.
- Tall manna gum woodlands, some with treefern understorey, are home to tawny frogmouths and sugar gliders.
- Tawny frogmouths have three distinct colour albinistic all-white aberrant plumage for this species has been documented.
- Significant differences in the orientation of tawny frogmouths on branches has been observed during winter and summer months.
- It has been speculated that the Papuan frogmouth may secrete a substance in its mouth that attracts flies.
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