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- Bird Pictures Facts | National Geographic
Your destination for news, pictures, facts, and videos about birds
- Birds - National Geographic Kids
Birds are warm-blooded vertebrates (vertebrates have backbones) and are the only animals with feathers Although all birds have wings, a few species can't fly
- These birds carry a toxin deadlier than cyanide - National Geographic
These birds carry a toxin deadlier than cyanide New Guinea is home to some of the world’s most toxic birds Why they contain poison, and how they withstand it is still a source of scientific
- These birds form mesmerizing clouds in the sky. Scientists may finally . . .
For centuries, researchers have pondered how starlings travel in those gorgeous shape-shifting clouds The answers continue to surprise them
- These flamboyant birds are the 17,000th species to enter Nat Geos . . .
These flamboyant birds are the 17,000th species to enter Nat Geo's Photo Ark Stunning photos of birds of paradise show evolution at its most extravagant
- Birds Around the World in 31 Incredible Photos - National Geographic
Birds Around the World in 31 Incredible Photos From stretched wings to hidden beaks, see striking photographs of birds in their global habitats
- Birds of Paradise - National Geographic
Learn about the dozens of species called birds of paradise Discover the dramatic, brightly colored plumage that sets them apart from their peers
- Bird migration is one of nature’s great wonders. Here’s how they do it.
Every spring and fall, a spectacle unfolds in the night sky as millions of birds attempt long, perilous journeys between their summer breeding and wintering grounds Most of the thousands of bird
- Ostriches, Falcons, Albatrosses and Other Great Birds
Birds come in all sorts of shapes and sizes: there are small birds and tall birds, short birds and big birds Some birds can fly far distances across the Earth, and others don’t even have wings
- New Bird of Paradise Species Confirmed in New Guinea
The team expects to find more birds of paradise species in New Guinea's biodiverse forests, which are so isolated and remote that human development has not encroached greatly on the birds' habitats
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