सीपकैचर Meaning in English
सीपकैचर शब्द का अंग्रेजी अर्थ : seepcutter
, oystercatcher
ऐसे ही कुछ और शब्द
सीप खानेवाला समुद्री पक्षीसीपी
सीप
ओयज़
अउंस
आउंस
ओजिस्ट
ओज़कराइट
ओजलिड
एज़ोन
ओजोन छिद्र
ओजोनिफ़रस
ओजोनिस
ओजोनिज़
ओजवा
सीपकैचर इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
(1982): The taxonomic status of the Canary Islands oystercatcher Haematopus (niger) meadewaldoi.
meadewaldoi be reclassified as either a melanistic color morph or subspecies of the Eurasian oystercatcher.
World Series of Poker The Canary Islands oystercatcher, Canarian oystercatcher, or Canarian black oystercatcher (Haematopus meadewaldoi),.
The Canary Islands oystercatcher was long considered a population of the African oystercatcher until 1913, when David Armitage Bannerman identified it as the unique subspecies H.
The Canary Islands oystercatcher was in all likelihood a bird of the rocky shore rather than sandy beaches; although it might have been driven from the latter as they were much more utilized by humans"nbsp;– which it tended to avoid.
As usual in oystercatchers, it had no hallux and the second and third toes were connected by a small web.
Although oystercatchers generally have adapted to the commonplace loss of the first egg in their clutch to predators and readily re-lay lost eggs, if the present species' clutch was indeed only one, egg collecting would have had a major impact: collectors would have to disturb more breeding pairs per number of eggs gathered.
Hybridisation in the Charadrii (oystercatchers, stilts, avocets and plovers).
Hybridisation between American (Haematopus palliatus frazari) and black oystercatchers (Haematopus bachmani) is relatively common in southern California and adjacent Mexico.
The Canary Islands oystercatcher was of similar size as its relatives, the African and Eurasian oystercatchers, or about 40–45"nbsp;cm (around 16.
They include the pied oystercatcher, the red-capped plover, the black swan and the fairy tern.
Females took probably 3 years to reach sexual maturity and males 4; this species can be assumed to have been long-lived like other oystercatchers, which not infrequently live for 20 or even more than 30 years.
However, DNA analyses conducted in 2018 and published in 2019 concluded that the Canary Islands oystercatcher was most likely a subspecies of the common Eurasian oystercatcher.