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・ Yellow-spotted tree frog
・ Yellow-spotted tropical night lizard
・ Yellow-star house
・ Yellow-streaked
・ Yellow-streaked greenbul
・ Yellow-streaked warbler
・ Yellow-striped
・ Yellow-striped brush finch
・ Yellow-striped caecilian
・ Yellow-striped chevrotain
・ Yellow-striped poison frog
・ Yellow-striped pygmy eleuth
・ Yellow-tail
・ Yellow-tailed African tetra
・ Yellow-tailed black cockatoo
Yellow-tailed oriole
・ Yellow-tailed parrot
・ Yellow-tailed rat
・ Yellow-tailed woolly monkey
・ Yellow-thighed finch
・ Yellow-throated antwren
・ Yellow-throated apalis
・ Yellow-throated big-eared bat
・ Yellow-throated bulbul
・ Yellow-throated bunting
・ Yellow-throated bush tanager
・ Yellow-throated cuckoo
・ Yellow-throated day gecko
・ Yellow-throated euphonia
・ Yellow-throated flycatcher


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Yellow-tailed oriole : ウィキペディア英語版
Yellow-tailed oriole

The yellow-tailed oriole (''Icterus mesomelas'') is a passerine bird in the New World family Icteridae. It breeds from southern Mexico to western Peru and northwestern Venezuela; in Peru it also lives in a river valley corridor.
The yellow-tailed oriole is 22–23 cm long and weighs 70 g. It is mainly yellow with a black back, lower face and upper breast. The wings are black with a yellow epaulet and the tail is black with yellow sides. This is the only oriole with prominent yellow in the tail, hence the species’ name. The sexes are similar, but young birds have the black on the back and tail replaced with olive-green.
There are four subspecies.
*Nominate ''I. m. mesomelas'', Mexico to Honduras, has yellow fringes to the tertials
* ''I. m. salvinii'', Caribbean lowlands of Nicaragua and Costa Rica, has no yellow fringes to the tertials and is more orange than the nominate race
* ''I. m. carrikeri'', Panama, Colombia and northwestern Venezuela, is like ''salvinii'', but less orange and smaller-billed
* ''I. m. taczanowskiis'', Pacific South America from Ecuador to western Peru, has white fringes to the tertials
The calls of this species include a ''chick'' and a ''weechaw''. The song is a melodic repetition of rich whistles, ''chuck, chuck-yeeaow''. It is often given as a duet, with the female’s response following or overlapping the male’s longer phrases.
This large oriole inhabits dense thickets, often with vines, '' Heliconias'' and similar dense growths, in swampy lowlands. The birds forage in pairs or small groups in denser vegetation than most orioles, mainly feeding on insects, although they will also take nectar and certain fruits such as gumbo-limbo (''Bursera simaruba'').〔Foster (2007)〕
It builds a deep but thin cup nest 2 m high in a thorny scrub by a stream. It lays three dark-blotched white eggs, which hatch in 13 days with a further 14 days to fledging.
The yellow-tailed oriole is fairly common except in Peru and Venezuela, but is reducing in numbers in parts of its range because of persecution by the cage-bird trade; this species is valued for both its appearance and its beautiful song.
==Footnotes==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Yellow-tailed oriole」の詳細全文を読む



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