Lol! I totally ride that! It's amazing how rediculously large those things were.
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Aargh... Maybe I will move to New Zealand! The University of Vermont, where I want to go, has a program in which the top 5% of their pre-vet students get to go to Massey University in New Zealand to study for a doctorate! Too tempting!
For my World Religions final project I want to study Maori religion. Unfortunately I don't think there's enough there. But I want to do some sort of project with New Zealand!
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An omnivorous parrot and the world's only parrot that lives in an alpine climate. Its current status is vulnerable because of its tendency to eat carrion, including dead sheep. Farmers believed that the Kea was hunting and killing sheep and many were killed for bounty as a result. :/ Granted, they will dig into the burrows of seagulls and kill the chicks within, it would seem to me at least like this little parrot is too small to kill a sheep.
I know little to nothing about these guys (except the kiwi
) so I'll have to do some research when I get home from school this afternoon.
The spoonbill is magnificent, though!
Kakapo.
Me likey. The world's only flightless parrot and also the world's heaviest parrot, likely as a result of adapting to a flightless lifestyle. Another adaptation is its fluffy face. The feathers on its face are called vibrissae, and they allow the kakapo to feel around as it navigates across the forest floor.
The Kakapo Recovery Programme has them all individually named. (For instance, the picture above that shows the vibrissae is a picture of Felix.)
Couldn't find any sources that said so for the Yellow-Eyed Penguin.
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