[47820] in linux-announce channel archive
Expiring Soon : Your AAA car emergency kit Reward
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (AAA Car Emergency Kit Confirmation)
Sat Mar 8 06:27:12 2025
Date: Sat, 8 Mar 2025 12:27:11 +0100
From: "AAA Car Emergency Kit Confirmation" <AAACarEmergencyKitShipment@tribalxforce.za.com>
Reply-To: "AAA Car Emergency Kit Confirmation" <AAACarEmergencyKitWinner@tribalxforce.za.com>
To: <linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu>
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Expiring Soon : Your AAA car emergency kit Reward
http://tribalxforce.za.com/cDdmmOza7r5An7CvtjzCEHtcCh6FJGu_dbhTlnKPSjkLeaJ0yg
http://tribalxforce.za.com/smsKiExnVNy5sXy6oF1d48RULVJP2Jj96Ny-kTeDFAa0NihWbw
cies are territorial, while others build their nests closer together. Little information is available on tanager breeding behavior. Males show off their brightest feathers to potential mates and rival males. Some species' courtship rituals involve bowing and tail lifting.
Most tanagers build cup nests on branches in trees. Some nests are almost globular. Entrances are usually built on the side of the nest. The nests can be shallow or deep. The species of the tree in which they choose to build their nests and the nests' positions vary among genera. Most species nest in an area hidden by very dense vegetation. No information is yet known regarding the nests of some species.
The clutch size is three to five eggs. The female incubates the eggs and builds the nest, but the male may feed the female while she incubates. Both sexes feed the young. Five species have helpers assist in feeding the young. These helpers are thought to be the previous year's nestlings.
Taxonomy
The family Thraupidae was introduced (as the subfamily Thraupinae) in 1847 by German ornithologist Jean Cabanis. The type genus is Thraupis.
The family Thraupidae is a member of an assemblage of over 800 birds known as the New World, nine-primaried oscines. The traditional pre-molecular classification was largely based on the different feeding specializations. Nectar-feeders were placed in Coerebidae (honeycreepers), large-billed seed-eaters in Cardinalidae (cardinals and grosbeaks), smaller-billed seed-eaters in Emberizidae (New World finch
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<div style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:8px;">cies are territorial, while others build their nests closer together. Little information is available on tanager breeding behavior. Males show off their brightest feathers to potential mates and rival males. Some species' courtship rituals involve bowing and tail lifting. Most tanagers build cup nests on branches in trees. Some nests are almost globular. Entrances are usually built on the side of the nest. The nests can be shallow or deep. The species of the tree in which they choose to build their nests and the nests' positions vary among genera. Most species nest in an area hidden by very dense vegetation. No information is yet known regarding the nests of some species. The clutch size is three to five eggs. The female incubates the eggs and builds the nest, but the male may feed the female while she incubates. Both sexes feed the young. Five species have helpers assist in feeding the young. These helpers are thought to be the previous year's nestlings. Taxonomy The family Thraupidae was introduced (as the subfamily Thraupinae) in 1847 by German ornithologist Jean Cabanis. The type genus is Thraupis. The family Thraupidae is a member of an assemblage of over 800 birds known as the New World, nine-primaried oscines. The traditional pre-molecular classification was largely based on the different feeding specializations. Nectar-feeders were placed in Coerebidae (honeycreepers), large-billed seed-eaters in Cardinalidae (cardinals and grosbeaks), smaller-billed seed-eaters in Emberizidae (New World finch</div>
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