few more of these guys🦆
1.Black sicklebill 2.Sparrowhawk 3.Lady Amherst's pheasant 4.Egyptian vulture 4.Pygmy owl 5.Black grouse 6.Jay 7.Pygmy owl
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Finland
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Russia
seen from Singapore

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from Germany

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Morocco
seen from Congo - Kinshasa

seen from United States
seen from Armenia
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from China

seen from Netherlands

seen from United States
few more of these guys🦆
1.Black sicklebill 2.Sparrowhawk 3.Lady Amherst's pheasant 4.Egyptian vulture 4.Pygmy owl 5.Black grouse 6.Jay 7.Pygmy owl

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Black Sicklebill (Epimachus fastosus), male, family Paradisaeidae, order Passeriformes, Arfak Mountains, New Guinea
photograph by Takaagi Nakashima
Bird-of-paradise (Paradisaeidae) family - round 1, section 1
Which is the best bird?
Blue bird-of-paradise
King of Saxony bird-of-paradise
Greater lophorina
Raggiana bird-of-paradise
Standardwing bird-of-paradise
Twelve-wired bird-of-paradise
Black sicklebill
White-Tipped Sicklebill (Eutoxeres aquila)
Family: Hummingbird Family (Trochilidae)
IUCN Conservation Status: Least Concern
The distinctive elongated, downwards-curving and perhaps just slightly goofy-looking beak of this small, dull-coloured hummingbird is an adaptation that allows it to feed on the nectar of plants with curved, tube-like flowers, particularly “lobster claws” in the genus Heliconia, which in turn rely heavily on sicklebills for pollination. Found mainly in evergreen forests across southern Central America and northern South America, White-Tipped Sicklebills, like other hummingbirds but unlike the vast majority of other bird species, utilize an insect-like manner of flapping that allows them to hover and move in any direction while in flight in order to carefully position themselves in a suitable place to extend their beaks and long, flexible tongues into flowers in order to feed, with a diet of sugar-rich, easily digestible nectar being necessary to meet the immense nutritional requirements associated with the extremely rapid flapping that makes their style of flight possible. Unusually for a bird White-Tipped Sicklebills are believed to breed multiple times each year, with males gathering together during the breeding seasons, producing harsh, high-pitch calls to attract females to their location and battling for the attention of mates in mid-air in a form of synchronised competitive courtship known as lekking. After mating, female White-Tipped Sicklebills build nests out of mammal fur, plant roots and spider webs (often hanging from or near Heliconia leaves, allowing for easy access to flowers) into which they lay 1-2 tiny eggs.
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Image Source: Here

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Full video: Black Sicklebill, Timothy Boucher
White-tipped Sicklebill
Here’s the art for the Black Sicklebill, an especially important card in Birdwatcher’s gameplay. The more of these you collect, the more points you get - it’s that simple! Always a treat to see one pop up in the deck.
Take a look at the art. The wide feathers hanging off to the sides of his shoulders are not his wings! You can see his wings are folded against his back. Those strange broad shoulder feathers are something else entirely - specialized for his extremely alien-looking display, which you can see at the video!