Viviparus javanicus - traducción al árabe
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Viviparus javanicus - traducción al árabe

SPECIES OF BIRD
Eurylaimus javanicus; Banded Broadbill; Eurylaimus javanicus javanicus; Eurylaimus horsfieldii; Eurylaimus javanicus billitonis; Eurylaimus javanicus friedmanni; Eurylaimus javanicus pallidus; Eurylaimus javanicus harterti; Eurylaimus javanicus brookei; Eurylaimus harterti
  • Adult from [[Sabah]], [[Malaysian Borneo]] showing the markings on the wings and back
  • Adult banded broadbill feeding juvenile in [[Sabah]]

Viviparus javanicus      
‎ الوَلاَّداتُ الجاوِيَّة‎
Viviparus         
GENUS OF MOLLUSCS
Paludina
الوَلاَّدات (جنس من القواقع)
Viviparus         
GENUS OF MOLLUSCS
Paludina
‎ الوَلاَّدات:جنس من القواقع‎

Definición

banteng
['bant??]
¦ noun a SE Asian forest ox that resembles the domestic cow, domesticated in Bali. [Bos javanicus.]
Origin
C19: from Malay.

Wikipedia

Banded broadbill

The banded broadbill (Eurylaimus javanicus) is a species of bird in the typical broadbill family Eurylaimidae found in Mainland Southeast Asia and the Greater Sunda Islands. It is sometimes split into two species, one including only the nominate subspecies, E. j. javanicus, and one including all the remaining subspecies. It inhabits a variety of forests, along with forest edge, rubber plantations and Falcataria falcata groves, mainly in lowland areas. A striking, large-bodied bird with a length of 21.5–23.0 cm (8.5–9.1 in), it is unlikely to be mistaken for another species. The broadbill is mostly purplish-red, with yellow-streaked black wings, a bright blue beak, a blackish face and greyish chin and upper breast. Females can be told apart from males by their lack of a black neckband, although these are indistinct in Bornean and Javan males. Despite its conspicuous appearance, the bird is usually hard to see due to its sluggishness and is usually only noticed when it vocalises.

The species mainly eats arthropods such as orthopterans (grasshoppers, katydids and crickets), true bugs and beetles, but has also been recorded feeding on snails, lizards, frogs and figs. On the mainland, breeding generally occurs during the dry season; populations in the Greater Sundas have a longer breeding season lasting from March to November. On Java, the broadbill is thought to breed year-round. Their large, raggedy nests are hung from trees at a height of 6–21 m (20–69 ft) over clearings or water bodies. Clutches have two or three eggs. The eggs are usually dull white with dark purple or reddish-brown flecks, but those from West Java are dirty white with dense rusty-brown to lavender-grey markings. The International Union for Conservation of Nature, which splits the banded broadbill into two species, classifies javanicus as being near-threatened and the other subspecies as being of least concern.