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Encyclopedia > Passeri

A songbird is a bird belonging to the suborder Oscines of Passeriformes (ca. 4000 species), in which the vocal organ is developed in such a way as to produce various sound notes. Songbirds evolved about 50 million years ago in the western part of Gondwana that later became Australia, New Zealand and Antarctica and later spread around the world.


This 'bird song' is essentially territorial in that it communicates the identity and whereabouts of an individual to other birds and also signals sexual intentions. It is not to be confused with bird calls which are used for alarms and contact, and are especially important in birds that feed or migrate in flocks.


Other birds have songs to attract mates or hold territory, but these are usually simple and repetitive, lacking the variety of many passerine songs. The monotonous repetition of the Common Cuckoo or Little Crake can be contrasted with the variety of a Nightingale or Marsh Warbler.


Although many songbirds have songs which are pleasant to the human ear, this is not invariably the case. Many members of the crow family make croaks or screeches which sound harsh to humans.


Examples of songbirds include:

see also


  Results from FactBites:
 
Pottery - Pesaro (561 words)
No doubt Passeri had at his disposal the writings of earlier authors, such as Piccolpasso, and, living on the spot, his researches gave him the means of obtaining information which was unique.
But Passeri affirms that, about 1450, glazing was practised with success upon pieces of ware decorated with coats-of-arms, portraits, figures, and inscriptions, outlined in manganese, lustred with madreperla, leaving the flesh white.
Passeri mentions pieces which he himself had seen, such as tiles inscribed in Pesaro 1502; plates " fatto in Pesaro 1541," " fatto in Pesaro 1542," and another plate with a mark OA, connected by a cross; but as a rule the ware was unmarked.
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