- close.
Wrybills are
known to
perform large aerial displays with
their flocks. This
usually happens shortly before the
migration south.
Wrybills form monogamous...
- – 5,000
wrybills, on the
other hand,
means that the
latter has well over one
order of
magnitude more
individuals than the former. The
wrybill only has...
- an
unusual beak in
which the
upper and
lower tips
cross each other. The
wrybill is the only
species of bird with a beak that is bent
sideways (always to...
- Wren-like
rushbird Wrenthrush Wrentit Wrinkled hornbill Writhed hornbill Wrybill Xantus's
hummingbird Xavier's
greenbul Xingu scale-backed
antbird Xingu...
- 50 Double-banded
plover Anarhynchus bicinctus Jardine & Selby, 1827 51
Wrybill Anarhynchus frontalis Quoy & Gaimard, 1832 52 New
Zealand plover Anarhynchus...
- threatened. It
regularly supports about one
percent of the
world po****tion of
wrybills. Manawatū-Whanganui
Region covers 22,220.64 km2 (8,579.44 sq mi) and had...
-
modified estuaries in New Zealand. It is
abundant in bird life,
including the
wrybill (Anarhynchus frontalis) and
Black stilt (Himantopus novaezelandiae). Many...
- Union.
Before the transfer,
Anarhynchus contained only one species, the
wrybill from New Zealand. The name
Anarhynchus derives from the
Ancient Gr**** ἀνα-...
-
Constant Quoy and
Joseph Paul
Gaimard described this
genus to
accommodate the
Wrybill. The name is from
Ancient Gr**** ana- (ἀνα-,
means "backward") and rhunkhos...
- in
Aotearoa New Zealand".
Birds New
Zealand (31).
September 2021. "The
Wrybill" (PDF).
Birds New Zealand. May 2016.
Archived (PDF) from the
original on...