Robust Silvereye

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(New page: image: robustsilvereye.jpg '''Common Name:''' Robust Silvereye '''Scientific Name:''' Zosterops strenuus '''Size:''' 4½ to 6 inches (10-15 cm) '''Habitat:''' Australia. Lord How...)
Current revision (18:29, 26 June 2013) (view source)
 
[[image: robustsilvereye.jpg ]]
[[image: robustsilvereye.jpg ]]
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'''Common Name:''' Robust Silvereye
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'''Common Name:''' Robust Silvereye<br>
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'''Scientific Name:''' Zosterops strenuus
'''Scientific Name:''' Zosterops strenuus
'''Size:'''  4½ to 6 inches (10-15 cm)
'''Size:'''  4½ to 6 inches (10-15 cm)
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'''Habitat:''' Australia. Lord Howe Island. Found in woodland areas and forest edges.
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'''Habitat:''' Australia; Lord Howe Island. Found in woodland areas and forest edges.
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'''Status:''' Extinct due to the release of an invasive non-native species, the black rat (Rattus rattus) on the island, which fed on eggs and nestlings.
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'''Status:''' Extinct. '''Global Population:''' 0.  It's extinction was due to the release of an invasive non-native species, the black rat (''Rattus rattus'') on the island, which fed on eggs and nestlings.
'''Diet:''' Silvereyes are highly flexible foragers. Foliage gleaning is the most common mode of foraging, but they also hawk, snap prey from a substrate (even small insects caught in spiders' webs), probe small clefts in clumps of leaves, bark, buds, flowers, and nests of other birds by forcefully opening the bill to widen the clefts in search of arthropod prey, and scavenge on the ground. Flocking in winter helps to locate sources of food in woodlands as well as to detect predators. They collect nectar with a brush-tipped tongue, peck succulent fruit, and swallow berries. They are known to disperse figs and other seeds of trees and shrubs.
'''Diet:''' Silvereyes are highly flexible foragers. Foliage gleaning is the most common mode of foraging, but they also hawk, snap prey from a substrate (even small insects caught in spiders' webs), probe small clefts in clumps of leaves, bark, buds, flowers, and nests of other birds by forcefully opening the bill to widen the clefts in search of arthropod prey, and scavenge on the ground. Flocking in winter helps to locate sources of food in woodlands as well as to detect predators. They collect nectar with a brush-tipped tongue, peck succulent fruit, and swallow berries. They are known to disperse figs and other seeds of trees and shrubs.
John Gould, the famed Australian ornithologist wrote of the Silvereyes in 1865 'The present new species is the largest member yet discovered of a group of birds comprising numerous species'.
John Gould, the famed Australian ornithologist wrote of the Silvereyes in 1865 'The present new species is the largest member yet discovered of a group of birds comprising numerous species'.
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'''Found in [http://www.daz3d.com/i.x/shop/itemdetails/-/?item=5607&cat=421;refid=653438178  More Threatened Endangered Extinct]'''
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'''Found in [http://hivewire3d.com/songbird-remix-threatened-endangered-extinct-2.html Songbird Remix Threatened Endangered Extinct 2] and [http://hivewire3d.com/songbird-remix-australia-v3.html Songbird ReMix Australia Volume III]'''

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