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oilbird

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oilbird

Nocturnal fruit-eating bird related to the nightjar, genus Steatornis caripensis, family Steatornithidae, order Caprimulgiformes. It is crow-sized and lives chiefly in caverns near the sea, in South America and Trinidad.

The oilbird produces a series of high-pitched pulses of about 6–10 KHz, not unlike those of bats. The sounds maybe the outgoing part of a system of echolocation, the detection of objects by the echoes reflected back from them. The pulses are uttered in the caves, but not outside, even at night.



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At the age of three months, a young oilbird weighs twice as much as its parents and most of its weight is fats Oilbirds, gull-sized but more like nightjars in appearance live in caves in Central America and forage for fruit at night A chick?
Watch in awe while thousands of native oilbirds living in Guacharo cave total darkness leave by the cave mouth during dusk in search for food.
However, because the oilbird, a nocturnal bird of South America that is unrelated to swiftlets, also developed echolocation, that capability has evolved in birds more than once.
 
 
 
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