FAMILY
本条目没有列出任何参考或来源。(2011年1月7日) 維基百科所有的內容都應該可供查證。请协助添加来自可靠来源的引用以改善这篇条目。无法查证的内容可能被提出异议而移除。 刺鹩科(学名:Acanthisittidae)是雀形目的一个科,现仅存2属2种,为新西兰特有种,有时也被称为“新西兰鹩”。体型较小,腿和喙较长,生活在山区。 刺鹩属(Acanthisitta) 刺鹩(Acanthisitta chloris) Xenicus †丛异鹩(Xenicus longipes) 石异鹩(Xenicus gilviventris) †斯蒂芬岛异鹩(Xenicus lyalli) Pachyplichas †Pachyplichas yaldwyni †Pachyplichas jagmi Dendroscansor †Dendroscansor decurvirostris 取自“https://zh.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=刺鹩科&oldid=34361315” 分类:刺鷯科 隐藏分类: 自2011年1月缺少来源的条目 本地相关图片与维基数据不同
via GBIF
The New Zealand wrens are a family (Acanthisittidae) of tiny passerines endemic to New Zealand. They were represented by seven Holocene species in four or five genera, although only two species in two genera survive today. They are understood to form a distinct lineage within the passerines, but authorities differ on their assignment to the oscines or suboscines (the two suborders that between them make up the Passeriformes). More recent studies suggest that they form a third, most ancient, suborder Acanthisitti and have no living close relatives at all. They are called "wrens" because of similarities in appearance and behaviour to the true wrens (Troglodytidae) but are not members of that family.
New Zealand wrens are mostly insectivorous foragers of New Zealand's forests, with one species, the New Zealand rock wren, being restricted to alpine areas. Both the remaining species are poor fliers and four of the five extinct species are known or suspected to have been flightless. Along with the long-legged bunting from Tenerife, one of the Canary Islands, they are the only passerines known to have lost the ability to fly. Of the species for which the plumage is known, they are drab-coloured birds with brown-green plumage. They form monogamous pair bonds to raise their young, laying their eggs in small nests in trees or amongst rocks. They are diurnal and like all New Zealand passerines, are, for the most part, sedentary.
via Wikidata · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).