Victorian Crowned Dove
The Victorian crowned dove is the largest pigeon in the world and the queen of the pigeons. Almost as big as a turkey. Both male and female have colored crowns on their heads. Large pigeons inhabit the island of New Guinea and the surrounding islets. The body is more than 70 cm long, has no flight ability, and can only jump upwards by a few meters or so.

It often inhabits forests or swampy areas near the water, gathers in small groups of foraging activities, nocturnal, and mainly eats seeds, fruits and insects of various plants.
Fire Crown Daisy
Fire-crowned Dai Chrysanthemum, also known as the Taiwan Dai Chrysanthemum Bird, is a bird of the Dai Chrysanthemum genus in the Dai Chrysanthemum family, which is endemic to China and distributed in Taiwan and other places. It is petite like a willow warbler. The male has a golden or orange-red crown on the top of the head and a black side crown stripe on the sides. The back is olive, the underparts are yellow, and the wings and tail are black.
It is commonly found in most temperate and subalpine coniferous forests, and inhabits the subsoil of coniferous forests. Feeds on insects, and the voice is thin and high.
Birds
Also known as the Bird of Paradise and the Sunbird, the Bird of Paradise is one of the most famous ornamental birds in the world, and most of the male birds of the Bird of Paradise family are colorful and have intricate and gorgeous ornamental feathers. Females and males who are not yet adults have a dull protective color and often have transverse spots on their abdomen. Some single-formulated species are all-over black or bluish-black. The body length is 15 to 110 cm, the weight is 50 to 450 grams, and the male is generally larger than the female.
It is found mainly in New Guinea and its nearby islands, with a few species found in northern Australia and the Maluku Islands. Its natural habitats are tropical forests, mountain forests, subalpine forest, dry steppe woodlands, and mangroves. Many are fruit-eating, some are insectivores, but also eat leaves, buds, flowers, arthropods and small vertebrates. Birds of Paradise are the most beautiful dancers and the most spectacular scenes during the breeding season.
bohemian waxwing
The Peacebird is a bird of the family Ornithischia in the family Ornithischia. Body length 18 cm, wingspan 34-35 cm, weight 40-64 g, lifespan of 13 years. It is a small songbird, the whole body is basically grape gray-brown, the head color is dark chestnut brown, the top of the head has a slender clustered crown, a black eye stripe from the base of the mouth through the eye to the hind occipital, located on both sides of the crown, very prominent in the chestnut brown head. The chin and throat are black. The wings have white wing spots, the secondary feathers have red drip spots at the stem ends, and the tail has black sub-spot spots and yellow end spots.
Its natural habitats are coniferous, mixed coniferous and broad-leaved forests, and poplar birch forests. It mainly feeds on plant foods such as fruit, seeds and shoots of plants such as oil pine, birch, rose, honeysuckle, wei mao, and rat plum. It is found in northern Europe, northern and central asia and eastern Asia, western Canada and northwestern United States.
Black-crowned crane
The black-crowned crane is the national bird of Nigeria, a precious ornamental bird in the zoo, with a thick and straight beak, gray-black, nostrils located in the middle, protruding outwards from the forehead, dark black down feathers, and countless earthy yellow velvet wires radiating around the pillow, forming a beautiful pompom, called crown feathers, except for the secondary flight feathers which are gray-white, the rest of the feathers are black.
The black-crowned crane is a resident bird without migration behavior, and is the "song and dance" star of the crane class, and both male and female cranes can sing and dance, especially in the early morning and evening every day, often collectively spreading their necks and singing. Mainly insect-eating, they eat large quantities of locusts, cicadas, but also small reptiles, frogs and other small vertebrates, as well as the seeds and shoots of various plants.
Slender-tailed wren warbler
The Slender-tailed Wren Warbler, also known as the Blue Wren Warbler, or Oriole Warbler, is a species of bird of the genus Slender-tailed Wren Warbler of the Australian Wren Warbler family that inhabits eastern Australia. The male's precursor is blue , with black markings , about 13 cm ( 5 inches ) long , with a narrow , blue , and upturned tail. The female is brown.
Australia's slender-tailed wren warbler is said to be the most flowery of birds. Although they are commonly paired with each other, many of their young chicks have been found to be the product of adultery.