Paypay:PloverCrocodileSymbiosis.jpg

Page contents not supported in other languages.
Tikang ha Wikipedia

Orihinal nga paypay(1,520 × 1,853 nga pixel, kadako han fayl: 1.66 nga MB, MIME nga tipo: image/jpeg)

An fayl in tikang ha Wikimedia Commons ngan puydi mahigamitan para han iba nga mga proyekto. An paglaladawan han iya fayl han paglaladawan nga pakli didto in ginpapakita ha sirong.

Dalikyat nga pulong

Tigtulidong
English: A small bird such as a plover or sandpiper, representing the Trochilus described by Herodotus, eats leeches from the gaping open mouth of a Nile crocodile in an early example of Cleaning Symbiosis.
Petsa
Ginkuhaan http://www.50birds.com/gendalligators2.htm, image taken from Popular Natural History, 1909
Awtor Henry Scherren
Pagtugot
(Gin-uutro paggamit inin nga file)
PD-Old-100 and PD-1923; Scherren died in 1911 so copyright has expired.
Other versions

A 'Trochilus' bird, perhaps a Sandpiper or Plover, Spur-winged Plover eats leeches from from the teeth of a Nile Crocodile, in a classic supposed example of cleaning symbiosis.

Egyptian Plover (Pluvianus aegyptius). Africa's Spur-winged Plover Vanellus spinosus is a lapwing and has black head with bold white triangle opening towards neck. P. aegypticus is a courser with a black head with two thin white stripes as here. The behaviour is apparently real, but not well documented. Dysmorodrepanis 21:35, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
Whatever the portrayed bird is meant to be, it is neither a Spur-winged plover (for instance black belly) nor an Egyptian plover (for instance black hindneck). The African bird it most resembles is the White-crowned/headed plover/lapwing (Vanellus albiceps). I guess the illustrator/author was not too familiar with African birds.
I wonder. The behaviour has been recorded among Sandpipers in Egypt, and the bird drawn is not unlike the Common Sandpiper (Actitis hypoleucos) (which overwinters in Egypt), so perhaps the artist used that as the model. Chiswick Chap (talk) 11:01, 17 February 2012 (UTC)
A footnote: there is little evidence for cleaning symbiosis between any bird and the Nile Crocodile, but what there is suggests that Herodotus and Scherren most likely heard about sandpipers; and Scherren clearly picked a sandpiper as his model for this illustration. Chiswick Chap (talk) 09:28, 4 November 2012 (UTC)

Illustration from Popular Natural History by Henry Scherren, published 1909. Image found at [:http://www.50birds.com/gendalligators2.htm].

Palilisensya:

Public domain

This work is in the public domain in its country of origin and other countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 100 years or fewer.


This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published (or registered with the U.S. Copyright Office) before January 1, 1929.

Captions

Add a one-line explanation of what this file represents

Items portrayed in this file

depicts English

Trochilus English

inception English

1909

Kaagi han paypay

Pidlita an adlaw/oras para makit-an an fayl nga naggawas hito nga oras.

Pitsa/OrasThumbnailMga dimensyonGumaramitKomento
waray pa kasasapawi12:31, 16 Enero 2013Bersyon han thumbnail han 12:31, 16 Enero 20131,520 × 1,853 (1.66 nga MB)Chiswick ChapFresh scan from book at better resolution
18:27, 27 Marso 2006Bersyon han thumbnail han 18:27, 27 Marso 2006360 × 394 (49 nga KB)Renamed user 82lfy1a93y96wr3pA Spur-winged Plover eats leeches from from the teeth of a Nile Crocodile, in a classic example of Symbiosis. Illustration from Popular Natural History by Henry Scherren, published 1909. Image found at [:http://www.50birds.com/gendalligators

An mga nasunod nga mga pakli nasumpay hini nga paypay:

Global file usage

An masunod nga iba nga mga wiki in nagamit hini nga file: