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+ | [[File:Oxpecker-WWD.jpeg.jpg|thumb]] |
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− | {{Dinoseries|WWD}} |
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− | Oxpeckers are small [[ |
+ | Oxpeckers are small [[birds]] that eat [[insects]] off large [[Mammalia|mammals]] and live in Africa. |
==Facts== |
==Facts== |
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+ | Oxpeckers are endemic to the savanna of Sub-Saharan Africa. Both the English and scientific names arise from their habit of perching on large mammals (both wild and domesticated) such as cattle or rhinoceroses, and eating ticks, botfly larvae, and other parasites. |
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− | + | According to the more recent studies of Muscicapoidea phylogeny, the oxpeckers are an ancient line related to Mimidae (mockingbirds and thrashers) and starlings but not particularly close to either. Considering the known biogeography of these groups, the most plausible explanation seems that the oxpecker lineage originated in Eastern or Southeastern Asia like the other two. |
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This would make the two species of Buphagus something like living fossils, and demonstrates that such remnants of past evolution can possess striking and unique autapomorphic adaptations. |
This would make the two species of Buphagus something like living fossils, and demonstrates that such remnants of past evolution can possess striking and unique autapomorphic adaptations. |
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==In Walking with... series== |
==In Walking with... series== |
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+ | ===''[[Walking with Dinosaurs]]''=== |
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+ | ====''[[Death of a Dynasty]]''==== |
− | In the last episode of '''Walking with Dinosaurs''', after it fastfowards to the modern African plains, the oxpeckers are seen, alongside many other birds, and they are described as living [[ |
+ | In the last episode of '''Walking with Dinosaurs''', after it fastfowards to the modern African plains, the oxpeckers are seen, alongside many other birds, and they are described as living [[dinosaurs]]. You can hear a ''[[Tyrannosaurus rex]]'' roar after that statement. |
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+ | {{Birds}} |
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[[Category:Walking with Dinosaurs Animals]] |
[[Category:Walking with Dinosaurs Animals]] |
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[[Category:Birds]] |
[[Category:Birds]] |
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[[Category:Bug eaters]] |
[[Category:Bug eaters]] |
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[[Category:Article stubs]] |
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[[Category:Walking with Dinosaurs 3D Animals]] |
[[Category:Walking with Dinosaurs 3D Animals]] |
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[[Category:Death of a Dynasty animals]] |
[[Category:Death of a Dynasty animals]] |
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+ | [[Category:Extant Organisms]] |
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+ | [[Category:Cenozoic animals]] |
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+ | [[Category:Holocene animals]] |
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+ | [[Category:Creatures from the Holocene]] |
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+ | [[Category:Insectivores]] |
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+ | [[Category:Saurischians]] |
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+ | [[Category:Creatures]] |
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+ | [[Category:Feathered animals]] |
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+ | [[Category:Modern birds]] |
Latest revision as of 20:48, 4 December 2020
Oxpeckers are small birds that eat insects off large mammals and live in Africa.
Facts
The oxpeckers are two species of bird which make up the family Buphagidae. Some ornithologists regard them as a subfamily Buphaginae within the starling family Sturnidae but they appear to be quite distinct.
Oxpeckers are endemic to the savanna of Sub-Saharan Africa. Both the English and scientific names arise from their habit of perching on large mammals (both wild and domesticated) such as cattle or rhinoceroses, and eating ticks, botfly larvae, and other parasites.
According to the more recent studies of Muscicapoidea phylogeny, the oxpeckers are an ancient line related to Mimidae (mockingbirds and thrashers) and starlings but not particularly close to either. Considering the known biogeography of these groups, the most plausible explanation seems that the oxpecker lineage originated in Eastern or Southeastern Asia like the other two.
This would make the two species of Buphagus something like living fossils, and demonstrates that such remnants of past evolution can possess striking and unique autapomorphic adaptations.
In Walking with... series
Walking with Dinosaurs
Death of a Dynasty
In the last episode of Walking with Dinosaurs, after it fastfowards to the modern African plains, the oxpeckers are seen, alongside many other birds, and they are described as living dinosaurs. You can hear a Tyrannosaurus rex roar after that statement.
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