-
family Drepanididae,
other authorities considered them a subfamily,
Drepanidinae, of Fringillidae, the
finch family. The
entire group was also called...
-
wrote important revisions within the
genus Zosterops and the
subfamily Drepanidinae. In 1987, he
split the
bridled white-eye into the
three distinct species...
- ISBN 0-8248-2190-4, p. 261
Harold Douglas Pratt: The
Hawaiian honeycreepers:
Drepanidinae.
Oxford University Press, 2005. ISBN 0-19-854653-X, p. 233
Olson & James...
- H. Douglas; Conant,
Shelia (2005-05-12). The
Hawaiian Honeycreepers:
Drepanidinae. OUP Oxford. ISBN 978-0-19-854653-5. N****ar J,
Ramirez N,
Linares O (1997)...
- kona), last
recorded in 1896. It was a
Hawaiian honeycreeper,
subfamily Drepanidinae. The
cardinal family (Cardinalidae) of the
Americas contains the following...
-
adapted to bird
pollination like most
related Malvaceae. The birds,
Drepanidinae, were
extirpated from
dryland forest by Polynesians, and most remaining...
- JSTOR 40166713. Pratt, H.
Douglas (2005). The
Hawaiian honeycreepers:
Drepanidinae. Bird
Families of the World. p. 249. ISBN 978-0-19-854653-5. v t e v...
-
Retrieved 5 July 2019. Pratt, H. Doug (2005). The
Hawaiian Honeycreepers:
Drepanidinae.
Oxford University Press. del Hoyo, Josep; Elliot, Andrew; Christie,...
- unavailable,
because it was
preoccupied by a
family of moths),
subfamily Drepanidinae, or
tribe Drepaninini, were long
recognized as
constituting a natural...
-
Retrieved 2022-06-28. Pratt, H.
Douglas (2005). The
Hawaiian Honeycreepers:
Drepanidinae. USA:
Oxford University Press. ISBN 019854653X. Kuhn, David. "Native...