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A couple of Mejiro feeding on the nectar of flowers of a kind of cherry tree that blossoms early, in a park / viewpoint near Katsuura. These little birds are quite acrobatic in their movements and can sip the flower nectar from an upside down position. They were disturbed and chased by a much bigger hyodori, brown-eared bulbul, who was interested to the same cherry trees.
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A Mejiro feeding on the nectar of flowers of a kind of cherry tree that blossoms early, in a park / viewpoint near Katsuura. These little birds are quite acrobatic in their movements and can sip the flower nectar from an upside down position. They were disturbed and chased by a much bigger hyodori, brown-eared bulbul, who was interested to the same cherry trees.
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The Japanese white-eye (Zosterops japonicus), originally introduced in Oâahu in 1929, has rapidly expanded its population and can now be found on every island of Hawaii; the climates of these islands range from tropical rain forests to deciduous forests. After subsequent releases and natural range expansion (enlargement of the area it occupies), the white-eye was determined to be the most abundant land bird on the Hawaiian Islands as early as 1987. It has become a vector for avian parasites that are now known to adversely affect populations of native birds such as Hawaiian honeycreepers, as well as spreading invasive plant species through discarded seeds. Source: Wikipedia
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The Japanese white-eye (Zosterops japonicus), originally introduced in Oâahu in 1929, has rapidly expanded its population and can now be found on every island of Hawaii; the climates of these islands range from tropical rain forests to deciduous forests. After subsequent releases and natural range expansion (enlargement of the area it occupies), the white-eye was determined to be the most abundant land bird on the Hawaiian Islands as early as 1987. It has become a vector for avian parasites that are now known to adversely affect populations of native birds such as Hawaiian honeycreepers, as well as spreading invasive plant species through discarded seeds. Source: Wikipedia
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