MacGregor's gardener - definitie. Wat is MacGregor's gardener
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Wat (wie) is MacGregor's gardener - definitie

SPECIES OF BIRD
Amblyornis macgregoriae; Macgregor's Bowerbird; MacGregor's Bowerbird; Macgregor's bowerbird

John Gardener (diplomat)         
BRITISH DIPLOMAT
Alfred Gardener; Alfred John Gardener
Sir Alfred John Gardener, KCMG CBE (6 February 1897 - 16 March 1985) was a British diplomat. He was Ambassador to Afghanistan from 1949 to 1951, and Ambassador to Syria from 1953 to 1957.
Master gardener program         
  • National Extension Master Gardener Logo
AMERICAN VOLUNTEER PROGRAM
Master Gardener; Master Gardeners; Master Gardener Programs; Master gardener
Master Gardener programs (also known as Extension Master Gardener Programs) are volunteer programs that train individuals in the science and art of gardening. These individuals pass on the information they learned during their training, as volunteers who advise and educate the public on gardening and horticulture.
The Constant Gardener         
BOOK
Constant Gardener; The constant gardener; The Constant Gardner
The Constant Gardener is a 2001 novel by British author John le Carré. The novel tells the story of Justin Quayle, a British diplomat whose activist wife is murdered.

Wikipedia

MacGregor's bowerbird

MacGregor's bowerbird (Amblyornis macgregoriae) is a medium-sized, up to 26 cm long, olive brown bowerbird of New Guinea's mountain forests, roughly the size and shape of an American Robin or a Eurasian Blackbird. The male is adorned with an erectile orange yellow crest, that is partly hidden until shown in courtship display. The unadorned female is similar to the male, but without the crest. Superb mimics, they are known for imitating other birds, pigs, rushing water, and even human speech.

The polygamous male builds a tower-like "maypole-type" bower, an elaborate courtship structure, with a central pole of twigs surrounded by a dish of moss with raised walls approximately 1 meter in diameter. He decorates the twigs of the maypole with flowers, fruits, insects and other objects. The diet consists mainly of fruits and insects.

When a female comes in proximity to the bower, the male struts and calls, and opens his crest to display its full color. Hiding the crest except during sexual display is thought to minimize his vulnerability to predators.

Widespread and common throughout its range, MacGregor's bowerbird is evaluated as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.

MacGregor's bowerbird was named in dedication to ‘Lady Macgregor’, wife of Sir William McGregor, Administrator of British New Guinea during 1888–98. Sir William's surname was originally, and thus formally, McGregor but he adopted the spelling MacGregor while in New Guinea as his personal preference.