new zealand wren การใช้
- The plumage of the New Zealand wrens is only known for the four species seen by European scientists.
- New Zealand wrens, like many New Zealand birds, suffered several extinctions after the arrival of humans in New Zealand.
- The New Zealand wrens evolved in the absence of mammals for many millions of years, and the family was fly.
- Like all New Zealand passerines, the New Zealand wrens are sedentary, and are not thought to undertake any migrations.
- The "'New Zealand wrens "'are a genera, although only two species survive in two genera today.
- It belongs to the Acanthisittidae family, also known as the New Zealand wrens, of which it is one of only two surviving species.
- The name wren has been applied to other, unrelated birds, particularly the New Zealand wrens ( Acanthisittidae ) and the Australian wrens ( Maluridae ).
- New Zealand wrens are mostly insectivorous foragers of New Zealand s forests, with one species, the New Zealand rockwren, being restricted to alpine areas.
- After the wave of extinctions and range contractions caused by the arrival of mammals in New Zealand, the New Zealand wrens have a much reduced range.
- The 27 Australasian " wren " species in the family Maluridae are unrelated, as are the New Zealand wrens in the family Acanthisittidae, the antwrens in the family Thamnophilidae, and the wren-babblers of the family Timaliidae.
- The "'long-billed wren "'( " Dendroscansor decurvirostris " ) was a species of New Zealand wren ( bill of this species was both long and curved, unlike that of all other Acanthisittid wrens.