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These songbirds violently fling and then impale their prey - what's the best charcoal grill

by:Longzhao BBQ     2020-05-07
These songbirds violently fling and then impale their prey  -  what\'s the best charcoal grill
Bite a mouse behind your neck, don't let go.
Now, shake your head at the crazy speed of 11 laps per second, as if to say "no, no!
"You have just imitated a hunting loshrishrike (), which has been considered one of the more terrible songbirds in North America as it nailed the bodies of its prey to thorns and barbed wire
Chiropractic biologist Diego sustata said the bird would pull it down as soon as the Burao had hung its prey on some long dragons, "so it would stay there.
He witnessed a scream as big as a Robin, stable as a skewer frog on a grill.
A bird may dig in right away, leave the meal for later eating, or have it sit there.
Shrimp catches a lot of giant insects, mixed with rodents, lizards, snakes and even birds.
This limit may be close to the bird's own weight.
A 1987 paper reported on anot's much lighter twograms than its own, and then tried to improve with its prize.
Recently, Sustaita has gained a rare opportunity to look at how the lo head began to kill prey.
Conservation managers bred a red-bellied Asian class on St. Clement Island.
The California State University, San Marcos, who works at Susta Tata, is about 120 kilometers West.
Sustaita set up a camera around the feeding site in the cage and took pictures of screaming, opening his mouth and having dinner.
"Their target is the neck of the prey," he said . ".
This is a very sharp thing.
The falcons and eagles attack with claws, but they evolved on the pine branches of the bird tree --
No grip so strong
Instead, scream and fall on their feet and attack with their hook bill.
"The bite happened at the same time as the foot touched the ground," Sustaita said . ".
If the mouse dodged somehow, the screaming bird would come again, "First the foot, then the mouth.
After reading the terrible shrimp-catching paper for decades, Sustaita first thought that the real killing power came from the Bill of the bird, with bumps on the side, sandwiched between the cervical spine and biting into the spine.
Screaming will definitely bite people, but according to the video, he is now proposing that shaking might help fix the prey or even kill it.
Sustaita and his colleagues found that St. Clement screamed at their mouse prey at a fierce speed, or in a car accident of 2 to 10 miles an hour, on September 5, researchers report.
"Not very fast," he admits, but enough to get a man whi.
On a little mouse, the shaking looks more destructive.
Video analysis shows that the body and head of the mouse are distorted at different speeds.
Sustaita calls it "Buckling ".
How much damage the twist does to the neck is still unclear.
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