The Red Avadavat is apparently sometimes called the Strawberry Finch.
Is it from the guy who named raccoons "trash panda"?I just found out another name for the Striped Skunk is the Fart Squirrel.![]()
.....which is not unreasonable when you see a really good male in breeding plumage. It really does look a bit like a Strawberry.The Red Avadavat is apparently sometimes called the Strawberry Finch.
I know, but it’s not a finch......which is not unreasonable when you see a really good male in breeding plumage. It really does look a bit like a Strawberry.
I know, but it’s not a finch.![]()
It's not a Fringillid finch, like a canary or a goldfinch. Colloquially at least, it's an Estrildid finch, like the zebra finch, which is a Ploceid finch, or a Cuban finch, which is a tanager.I know, but it’s not a finch.![]()
or a Cuban finch, which is a tanager.
Exactly what is an avadavat/waxbill? - if not a finch?
Amandava - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Amandava
Amandava is a genus of the estrildid finches. These birds are found in dense grass or scrub in ... The two avadavats, which are very closely related, are found in tropical South Asia, and the waxbill in Africa. Various members of this genus are ...
Genus: Amandava; Blyth, 1836
Despite the word "finch" being included in the common names of many of the species, they are not closely related to birds with this name in other families, such as the Fringillidae, Emberizidae or Passerellidae.
So what you should have said is that this genus of finch is not closely related to other finches - rather than it not being a finch at all. 'Finch'is a pretty broad name, as FPBird made very clear.
My only guess for what, 'badger', could refer to is the Tasmanian devil.Some from Australia. Guess what they refer to:
The Australian magpie is not a corvid. Lots of others I can't recall right now.
- native bear
- badger
- spiny anteater
- rat kangaroo
- native cat
Wombat.My only guess for what, 'badger', could refer to is the Tasmanian devil.
I'm guessing that is a reference to the teeth. Blainville described it from a skull, and the teeth of Cynogale are distinctive (although I don't know if they could be described as being like those of a shark). The original paper is in French, so I haven't tried to find it.One of my favourite scientific names that is no longer in use is for the otter civet. I have found several references to the species being referred to as Viverra carcharias - literally 'shark civet'.
No, wombat.My only guess for what, 'badger', could refer to is the Tasmanian devil.
Some from Australia. Guess what they refer to:
The Australian magpie is not a corvid. Lots of others I can't recall right now.
- native bear
- badger
- spiny anteater
- rat kangaroo
- native cat