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" ... Northern cardinals, Cardinalis cardinalis, are one of many examples of dichromatism in birds. Male ... [+] (left) and female (right). (Credit: Geoffrey Hill) ... "
" ... Northern cardinals, Cardinalis cardinalis: Female (Credit: Ken Thomas / public domain) and male... [+] (inset, upper left; credit: Dick Daniels / CC BY-SA 3.0). This is a sexually dimorphic species where males and females can be visually distinguished on the basis of their plumage colors. (Composite credit: Bob O’Hara.) ... "
" ... Ritualized feeding is a part of courtship for many birds, from cardinals to gulls to hawks. For the Greater Roadrunner, it’s no challenge for the male to catch a lizard to give to the female. At times, though, he will present to her a large insect or a piece of nest material, or go through the motions of bestowing a gift with nothing at all. Apparently, it’s the thought that counts. ... "
" ... That includes Pope Francis, Catholics worldwide, French President Emmanuel Macron, Parisians, cardinals, bishops, nuns, architects, artists, Europeans, Americans—the entire globe which watches in shock, shaken to their foundation. It’s no overstatement to suggest Notre Dame represents civilization itself, as 20th century art historian Lord Kenneth Clark once suggested. ... "
" ... With rare exceptions, parrots are colorful -- many of them, brilliantly so. Although most birds with so-called “warm” plumage colors, like cardinals and goldfinches, for example, get their bright red, orange and yellow colors from pigments in their diet, parrots are different: they biochemically synthesize their color molecules, which are known as psittacofulvins. But when psittacofulvins are extracted from feathers and analyzed by curious scientists, they appear orange in solution. So where do parrots’ reds come from? According to a new study by a team of scientists in New Zealand, parrots combine the chemistry and physics of psittacofulvins to create a range of brilliant hues. ... "