- as hosts,
whereas the
paradise whydahs choose pytilias.
Unlike the
cuckoos and honeyguides, the
indigobirds and
whydahs do not
destroy the host's eggs...
- Look up
whydah in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Whydah may
refer in
English to:
Whydah, one of a
number of
species of
birds in the
family Viduidae...
-
Whydah Gally /ˈhwɪdə ˈɡæli, ˈhwɪdˌɔː/ (commonly
known simply as the
Whydah) was a
fully rigged ship that was
originally built as a p****enger, cargo, and...
- The
Kingdom of
Whydah (/ˈhwɪdə, ˈhwɪdˌɔː/) was a
kingdom on the
coast of West
Africa in what is now Benin. It was a
major slave trading area
which exported...
- The eggs of both the host and the
whydah are white,
although the
whydah's are
slightly larger. The
nestling whydahs mimic the gape
pattern of the fledglings...
-
whydahs look like
ordinary sparrows with
short tails during the non-breeding season. In addition,
hybridization can
occur with
these paradise whydahs...
-
vessel as his own,
before capturing a state-of-the-art
slave trade ship, the
Whydah Gally, in the
early spring of 1717. Two
months later, the
vessel was caught...
-
November 2021. Laws of Botswana:
Wildlife Conservation and
National Parks Page 116[permanent dead link] The
Paradise Whydahs Species Factsheet v t e...
- The
Whydah: A
Pirate Ship Feared, Wrecked, and
Found is a 2017
nonfiction children's book by
Martin W.
Sandler about the
Whydah, "a large, fast, and heavily...
- The straw-tailed
whydah (Vidua fischeri) is a
species of bird in the
family Viduidae. It is
found in Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia,
South Sudan, Tanzania, and...