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O BIOL 4142 ORNITHOLOGY LAB PRACTICE QUIZZES Lab 2

O BIOL 4142 ORNITHOLOGY LAB PRACTICE QUIZZES Lab 2. For each species: • The first photo is one in which everything is covered except for a couple of key features. You should be able to ID the species just from this view.

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O BIOL 4142 ORNITHOLOGY LAB PRACTICE QUIZZES Lab 2

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  1. OBIOL 4142ORNITHOLOGY LAB PRACTICE QUIZZESLab 2 For each species: • The first photo is one in which everything is covered except for a couple of key features. You should be able to ID the species just from this view. • The second photo is reveals the entire bird. Now, you definitely should be able to identify the species. • The third photo adds the English name so that you know if … oops I mean … can confirm that you got the ID correct.

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  4. 1 Whooping Crane

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  7. 2 Conspicuous head and back stripes; extremely long bill; strongly banded sides and flanks Wilson’s Snipe

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  10. 3 Ruddy Turnstone Sharply pointed bill; messy, dark blotches on breast

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  13. 4 Willet White patch near the base of the blackish primaries; overall gray plumage

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  16. 5 Dark “sideburn” mark in face Peregrine Falcon

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  19. 6 More extensively gray face and darker throat and breast than King or Clapper Virginia Rail

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  22. 7 Conspicuous pale superciliary and browner plumage tones (vs. Black-bellied). If you could see its rump, how would it differ from Black-bellied? American Golden Plover

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  25. 8 Almost completely white below and in face; black legs; pale gray above Sanderling

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  28. 9 Two-toned plover bill distinguished this from everything but Piping, which has a much paler face and crown Semipalmated Plover

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  31. 10 Nothing else has that white crown and dark face Osprey

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  34. 11 Sandhill Crane

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  37. 12 Stripes on crown perpendicular to body axis; short legs, rufous belly American Woodcock

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  40. 13 Wilson’s Phalarope

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  43. 14 Purple Gallinule

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  46. 15 Slightly decurved bill, black legs, dark across breast Dunlin

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  48. 16

  49. 16 All black, thin bill; incomplete breast band Snowy Plover

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