|
ANIMAL INFORMATION: Please note, this part of mongabay has been updated |
|
Nihoa FinchEducational resources on Nihoa FinchNihoa Finch or Telespiza ultima is listed on the IUCN Red list (1996) as Critically Endangered due to B1+3d. IUCN Profile of the Nihoa Finch Introduction — Nihoa Finch — Birds of ... Courtesy Preview. This Introductory article that you are viewing is a courtesy preview of the full life history account of this species. The remaining articles (Distribution bna.birds.cornell.edu/bna/species/639b TAXONOMY Other common names for the Nihoa finch which were found in the literature are: Nihoa finchbill (02), Nihoa finch-bill (Western Hemisphere Convention Annex, 1967) Laysan finch fwie.fw.vt.edu/WWW/esis/lists/e101042.htm Figure Gallery — Nihoa Finch — Birds of ... Figure 1. Current distribution of Laysan and Nihoa Finch bna.birds.cornell.edu/bna/species/639b/galleries/figures Photo Gallery — Nihoa Finch — Birds of ... Join now to see them all. bna.birds.cornell.edu/bna/species/639b/galleries ADW: Telespyza ultima: Classification Telespyza ultima (Nihoa finch) ... animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/classification/Telespyza_ultima.html TAXONOMY However, one wild, banded, twelve-year-old Nihoa finch (Telespyza ultima), a close relative of the Laysan finch, was recaptured in 1980; it had originally been banded in fwie.fw.vt.edu/WWW/esis/lists/e101041.htm Sheila Conant - Department of Zoology, University of Hawaii Endangered Species Information Workbook: Nihoa Finch. U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Office of Endangered Species, Endangered Species Information www.hawaii.edu/zoology/faculty/conant.htm UW entomologist surveys Hawaiian island for grasshopper damage Seventy-two terrestrial arthropods, including giant crickets, and two endemic songbirds, the Nihoa finch and Nihoa millerbird, are found only on Nihoa, according to the www.uwyo.edu/cessupport/showrelease.asp?id=881 Sheila Conant's CV Endangered Species Information Workbook: Nihoa Finch. U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Office of Endangered Species, Endangered Species Information Service www.hawaii.edu/eecb/FacultyPgs/sheila_info/conant_cv.html college of agriculture Seventy-two terrestrial arthropods, including giant crickets, and two endemic songbirds, the Nihoa finch and Nihoa millerbird, are found only on Nihoa, according to the www.uwyo.edu/AgCollege/AGNEWS/spring06.pdf
|