Siberian chickadee - significado y definición. Qué es Siberian chickadee
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Qué (quién) es Siberian chickadee - definición

SPECIES OF BIRD
Poecile cincta; Parus cinctus; Gray-headed Chickadee; Poecile cinctus; Parus sibiricus; Siberian Tit; Grey-headed Chickadee; Gray-headed chickadee; Siberian tit
  • Eggs, Collection [[Museum Wiesbaden]]
  • ''Poecile cinctus lapponicus'' - ([[MHNT]])

Uralo-Siberian languages         
PROPOSED LANGUAGE FAMILY CONSISTING OF URALIC, YUKAGHIR AND ESKIMO–ALEUT; PROPOSED IN 1998 BY MICHAEL FORTESCUE
Uralo-Siberian; Uralo-Siberian language; Uralo-Siberian dialect; Proto-Uralo-Siberian
Uralo-Siberian is a hypothetical language family consisting of Uralic, Yukaghir, Eskimo–Aleut, possibly Nivkh, and formerly Chukotko-Kamchatkan. It was proposed in 1998 by Michael Fortescue, an expert in Eskimo–Aleut and Chukotko-Kamchatkan, in his book Language Relations across Bering Strait.
chickadee         
GROUP OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS
Chickadees; Chickadee (bird); Chicadee
n.
Black-capped titmouse (Parus atricapillus).
Chickadee         
GROUP OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS
Chickadees; Chickadee (bird); Chicadee
·noun A small bird, the blackcap titmouse (Parus atricapillus), of North America;
- named from its note.

Wikipedia

Grey-headed chickadee

The grey-headed chickadee or Siberian tit (Poecile cinctus), formerly Parus cinctus, is a passerine bird in the tit family Paridae. It is a widespread resident breeder throughout subarctic Scandinavia and the northern Palearctic, and also into North America in Alaska and the far northwest of Canada. It is a conifer specialist. It is resident, and most birds do not migrate. Curiously (with respect to its name), the bird has no grey on its head, which is black, white, and brown.

It is a fairly large tit, 13.5–14 cm long with a weight of 11–14.3 g. The head is dark brown with white cheeks, the mantle brown, the wing feathers blackish with pale fringes, and the underparts whitish with pale brown flanks.

Ecologists in Folldal, Hedmark, Norway found that the Siberian tits accounted for only 1% of all tit individuals in lichen-dominated pine forest in 2011 as opposed to 64% in 1982. This dramatic reduction is attributed to the interspecies competition with the willow tits and great tits, decreased vegetation due to climate change, and logging of old-growth trees which are preferred over new-growth trees .