trumpeter swan - significado y definición. Qué es trumpeter swan
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Qué (quién) es trumpeter swan - definición

SPECIES OF BIRD
Cygnus buccinator; Trumpeter Swans; Trumpeter Swan; Trumpeter swans; Olor buccinator
  • Birds of America]] by [[John James Audubon]], depicting the trumpeter swan
  • Approximate summer range of the three regional populations of trumpeter swans in North America
  • Three flying in [[Missouri]]
  • In winter, they may eat crop remnants in agricultural fields, but more commonly they feed while swimming
  • Juvenile at the [[Cincinnati Zoo]]
  • Trumpeter swan incubation.
  • Trumpeter swan and a [[common raccoon]] (''Procyon lotor''). Healthy adults are largely invulnerable to predation, but chicks and eggs are targeted by raccoons.
  • Trumpeter swan pair in Riverlands Migratory Bird Sanctuary.
  • Trumpeter swan courtship in [[Seedskadee National Wildlife Refuge]].
  • Trumpeter swan brood
  • Adult and three juvenile trumpeter swans on the shore of Woods Lake, near Oyama, British Columbia
  • Mated pair on a lake, [[Kenai National Wildlife Refuge]], [[Alaska]]
  • Wintering in [[British Columbia]]

trumpeter swan         
¦ noun a large migratory swan with a black and yellow bill and a honking call, breeding in northern North America. [Cygnus buccinator.]
whistling swan         
  • Woodcut by [[Robert Elliot Bewick]] of the swan named in memory of his father by [[William Yarrell]]. 1847 edition of [[Thomas Bewick]]'s ''[[A History of British Birds]]''.
  • Bewick's swan (''Cygnus bewickii'') with [[northern lapwing]] and [[common shelduck]], at [[Hickling Broad]], Stalham, Norfolk UK
  • Adult whistling swans (''C. c. columbianus''). Click to magnify for seeing variation in the yellow bill spots.
  • Saitama]] (Japan)
  • The egg
  • Adult whistling swan in flight. Seen from below, all "Arctic" swans look almost identical
  • Whistling swan with yellow patch at base of bill
¦ noun a bird of the North American race of the tundra swan. [Cygnus columbianus columbianus.]
Bewick's swan         
  • Woodcut by [[Robert Elliot Bewick]] of the swan named in memory of his father by [[William Yarrell]]. 1847 edition of [[Thomas Bewick]]'s ''[[A History of British Birds]]''.
  • Bewick's swan (''Cygnus bewickii'') with [[northern lapwing]] and [[common shelduck]], at [[Hickling Broad]], Stalham, Norfolk UK
  • Adult whistling swans (''C. c. columbianus''). Click to magnify for seeing variation in the yellow bill spots.
  • Saitama]] (Japan)
  • The egg
  • Adult whistling swan in flight. Seen from below, all "Arctic" swans look almost identical
  • Whistling swan with yellow patch at base of bill
¦ noun a bird of the Eurasian race of the tundra swan. [Cygnus columbianus bewickii.]
Origin
from the name of the English artist and engraver Thomas Bewick (1753-1828).

Wikipedia

Trumpeter swan

The trumpeter swan (Cygnus buccinator) is a species of swan found in North America. The heaviest living bird native to North America, it is also the largest extant species of waterfowl, with a wingspan of 185 to 250 cm (6 ft 2 in to 8 ft 2 in). It is the American counterpart and a close relative of the whooper swan (Cygnus cygnus) of Eurasia, and even has been considered the same species by some authorities. By 1933, fewer than 70 wild trumpeters were known to exist, and extinction seemed imminent, until aerial surveys discovered a Pacific population of several thousand trumpeters around Alaska's Copper River. Careful reintroductions by wildlife agencies and the Trumpeter Swan Society gradually restored the North American wild population to over 46,000 birds by 2010.