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How much do you know about these rare animals

1. Pheasant

How much do you know about these rare animals

Pheasant, also known as pheasant, pheasant family. It usually refers to more than 50 species of birds in 16 genera under the pheasant subfamily. Most species of male pheasants are brightly colored, while female pheasants are duller. Male pheasants are aggressive every estrus season. Fight to the death in front of the female pheasant. The female pheasant seemed indifferent at this time. More than a dozen pheasants, such as spot-tailed pheasants, cabot horn pheasants, Chier pheasants produced in the Himalayas, red pheasants produced in China, white-necked long-tailed pheasants, Micado pheasants from Japan, Svihou pheasants, and brown-eared pheasants, have been endangered.

2. Bird hunting

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The crater is a genus of warblers, the genus Grey-feathered warbler, a small group of mosquito-eating songbirds native to North and South America, with about 11 species. The blue-gray civet, with its long white-rimmed tail, is about 11 centimeters long and looks like a small mockingbird. They breed and live in regions from eastern Canada to California, the Bahamas and Guatemala. The black-tailed thrush inhabits the desert region of the southwestern United States. Other aphids are found in south-central South America and Cuba.

3. Chatham Island Songbird (qú)

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The singing plover, also known as the dōng, has an orange or dark red chest. The American singing plover is one of the most famous birds. The first immigrants to the Americas were to call it the Singing Plover because its chest resembled the smaller European Singing Plover. Three species of singing plovers, including the Chatham Island Plover, are endangered.

4. Long-tailed Dharma monks

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Dharma monks Dharma monks Dharma monks subfamily Dharma monks. There are 5 species in the world, belonging to the Dharma monk order, Dharma monk family. The Nagaochi Dharma monks are only produced in the small desert area in the southwest of the Democratic Republic of Madagascar, a small area 30 to 60 kilometers wide and 200 kilometers long, which is the only home of the Longtail Dharma monks. The numbers are scarce, and in 2009 the IUCN estimated that there were only 9,500 to 32,700 in the world. It is close to extinction, and the future is uncertain.

5. Ear-drooping crow 

How much do you know about these rare animals

The drooping-eared crow, also known as the honey-eating finch, belongs to the family Finches. Divided into two subspecies, the North Island Drooping Eared Crow has been extinct, while the South Island Drooping Crow, known as the Drooping Crow, is endemic to New Zealand and has a body length of about 45 cm. The black face, the mouth has different degrees of curvature, the base of the mouth has a large and bright flesh hanging, the beak horns have blue and orange stripes, and the body feathers are dark and shiny. Inhabiting the forest of the mountains, it mainly eats fruits and calls like a soft and rounded song. So the locals also call it "organ bird" and "bell bird".