翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Blue-Eyed Son
・ Blue-eyed soul
・ Blue-eyed spotted cuscus
・ Blue-eyed triplefin
・ Blue-faced honeyeater
・ Blue-faced malkoha
・ Blue-faced parrotfinch
・ Blue-faced rail
・ Blue-footed booby
・ Blue-fronted amazon
・ Blue-fronted blue flycatcher
・ Blue-fronted dancer
・ Blue-fronted fig parrot
・ Blue-fronted lancebill
・ Blue-fronted lorikeet
Blue-fronted parrotlet
・ Blue-fronted redstart
・ Blue-fronted robin
・ Blue-gray
・ Blue-gray gnatcatcher
・ Blue-gray mouse
・ Blue-gray tanager
・ Blue-green
・ Blue-Green Cities
・ Blue-green shan shui
・ Blue-headed bee-eater
・ Blue-headed coucal
・ Blue-headed crested flycatcher
・ Blue-headed fantail
・ Blue-headed hummingbird


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Blue-fronted parrotlet : ウィキペディア英語版
:''"Red-winged parrotlet" redirects here, but see text for details.''The blue-fronted parrotlet (''Touit dilectissimus'') is also known as the red-winged parrotlet (but see below). It is a parrot in N. South America from E. Panama down the west coastal Andes to Peru, with a second population around and south of Lake Maracaibo. It is 15 cm, green with a short tail, blue forehead with narrow band of red under eye, red shoulders and leading edge of underwing, and the remaining underwing coverts yellow. Edges of tail also yellowish.Usually found in humid, wet, and cloud forest from 800-1600m, it is occasionally spotted as low as 100m. Little known, as it is hard to see in the canopy where it usually lives and is most often seen while flying over the canopy.The red-fronted parrotlet (''T. costaricensis'') is, especially in older sources like ITIS, included in the red-winged parrotlet. Most modern authors consider them two species. Strictly speaking, the term "red-winged parrotlet" refers to the ''T. costaricensis - dilectissimus'' clade.==References==Juniper & Parr (1998) ''Parrots: A Guide to Parrots of the World''; ISBN 0-300-07453-0.
:''"Red-winged parrotlet" redirects here, but see text for details.''
The blue-fronted parrotlet (''Touit dilectissimus'') is also known as the red-winged parrotlet (but see below). It is a parrot in N. South America from E. Panama down the west coastal Andes to Peru, with a second population around and south of Lake Maracaibo. It is 15 cm, green with a short tail, blue forehead with narrow band of red under eye, red shoulders and leading edge of underwing, and the remaining underwing coverts yellow. Edges of tail also yellowish.
Usually found in humid, wet, and cloud forest from 800-1600m, it is occasionally spotted as low as 100m. Little known, as it is hard to see in the canopy where it usually lives and is most often seen while flying over the canopy.
The red-fronted parrotlet (''T. costaricensis'') is, especially in older sources like ITIS, included in the red-winged parrotlet. Most modern authors consider them two species. Strictly speaking, the term "red-winged parrotlet" refers to the ''T. costaricensis - dilectissimus'' clade.
==References==

Juniper & Parr (1998) ''Parrots: A Guide to Parrots of the World''; ISBN 0-300-07453-0.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 blue-fronted parrotlet (''Touit dilectissimus'') is also known as the red-winged parrotlet (but see below). It is a parrot in N. South America from E. Panama down the west coastal Andes to Peru, with a second population around and south of Lake Maracaibo. It is 15 cm, green with a short tail, blue forehead with narrow band of red under eye, red shoulders and leading edge of underwing, and the remaining underwing coverts yellow. Edges of tail also yellowish.Usually found in humid, wet, and cloud forest from 800-1600m, it is occasionally spotted as low as 100m. Little known, as it is hard to see in the canopy where it usually lives and is most often seen while flying over the canopy.The red-fronted parrotlet (''T. costaricensis'') is, especially in older sources like ITIS, included in the red-winged parrotlet. Most modern authors consider them two species. Strictly speaking, the term "red-winged parrotlet" refers to the ''T. costaricensis - dilectissimus'' clade.==References==Juniper & Parr (1998) ''Parrots: A Guide to Parrots of the World''; ISBN 0-300-07453-0.">ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
blue-fronted parrotlet (''Touit dilectissimus'') is also known as the red-winged parrotlet (but see below). It is a parrot in N. South America from E. Panama down the west coastal Andes to Peru, with a second population around and south of Lake Maracaibo. It is 15 cm, green with a short tail, blue forehead with narrow band of red under eye, red shoulders and leading edge of underwing, and the remaining underwing coverts yellow. Edges of tail also yellowish.Usually found in humid, wet, and cloud forest from 800-1600m, it is occasionally spotted as low as 100m. Little known, as it is hard to see in the canopy where it usually lives and is most often seen while flying over the canopy.The red-fronted parrotlet (''T. costaricensis'') is, especially in older sources like ITIS, included in the red-winged parrotlet. Most modern authors consider them two species. Strictly speaking, the term "red-winged parrotlet" refers to the ''T. costaricensis - dilectissimus'' clade.==References==Juniper & Parr (1998) ''Parrots: A Guide to Parrots of the World''; ISBN 0-300-07453-0.">ウィキペディアで「:''"Red-winged parrotlet" redirects here, but see text for details.''The blue-fronted parrotlet (''Touit dilectissimus'') is also known as the red-winged parrotlet (but see below). It is a parrot in N. South America from E. Panama down the west coastal Andes to Peru, with a second population around and south of Lake Maracaibo. It is 15 cm, green with a short tail, blue forehead with narrow band of red under eye, red shoulders and leading edge of underwing, and the remaining underwing coverts yellow. Edges of tail also yellowish.Usually found in humid, wet, and cloud forest from 800-1600m, it is occasionally spotted as low as 100m. Little known, as it is hard to see in the canopy where it usually lives and is most often seen while flying over the canopy.The red-fronted parrotlet (''T. costaricensis'') is, especially in older sources like ITIS, included in the red-winged parrotlet. Most modern authors consider them two species. Strictly speaking, the term "red-winged parrotlet" refers to the ''T. costaricensis - dilectissimus'' clade.==References==Juniper & Parr (1998) ''Parrots: A Guide to Parrots of the World''; ISBN 0-300-07453-0.」の詳細全文を読む



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