Borin Wood Pigeon
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(New page: image: borinwoodpigeon.jpg '''Common Name:''' Bonin Wood Pigeon '''Scientific Name:''' Columba versicolor '''Size:''' 17 1/2 -18 inches (45 cm) '''Habitat:''' Japan. Endemic to Nako...) |
Current revision (21:26, 26 June 2013) (view source) |
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'''Habitat:''' Japan. Endemic to Nakodo-jima and Chichi-jima in the Ogasawara Islands off the coast of Japan. Lived in conifer forests. | '''Habitat:''' Japan. Endemic to Nakodo-jima and Chichi-jima in the Ogasawara Islands off the coast of Japan. Lived in conifer forests. | ||
- | '''Status:''' Extinct. Its extinction was caused by deforestation, hunting and predation by introduced rats and cats. The last known specimen of a Bonin Wood-pigeon was taken in 1889. | + | '''Status:''' Extinct. '''Global Population:''' 0. Its extinction was caused by deforestation, hunting and predation by introduced rats and cats. The last known specimen of a Bonin Wood-pigeon was taken in 1889. |
'''Diet:''' Fruits, seeds and buds. | '''Diet:''' Fruits, seeds and buds. | ||
'''Cool Facts:''' The Bonin wood-pigeon is recorded from just two islands in the Ogasawara Group-Peel Island, where it was discovered by naturalists travelling with Captain Beechey on the Blossom in 1827, and Nakondo-shima, where the last specimen was taken in 1889. Friedrich von Kittlitz also collected it on Peel in 1828. The last animal seen was a male obtained by a Mr Holst, who was collecting for the British ornithologist Henry Seebohm. It was a large and beautiful pigeon, and may have always been rather uncommon. Almost nothing is known of its natural history, although Errol Fuller, a researcher on obscure and extinct birds, considers that it fed on fruits, seeds and buds. Three specimens exist, in museums in Russia, Germany and Britain. | '''Cool Facts:''' The Bonin wood-pigeon is recorded from just two islands in the Ogasawara Group-Peel Island, where it was discovered by naturalists travelling with Captain Beechey on the Blossom in 1827, and Nakondo-shima, where the last specimen was taken in 1889. Friedrich von Kittlitz also collected it on Peel in 1828. The last animal seen was a male obtained by a Mr Holst, who was collecting for the British ornithologist Henry Seebohm. It was a large and beautiful pigeon, and may have always been rather uncommon. Almost nothing is known of its natural history, although Errol Fuller, a researcher on obscure and extinct birds, considers that it fed on fruits, seeds and buds. Three specimens exist, in museums in Russia, Germany and Britain. | ||
- | '''Found in [http:// | + | |
+ | '''Found in [http://hivewire3d.com/songbird-remix-threatened-endangered-extinct-2.html Songbird ReMix Threatened Endangered Extinct 2]''' |