Turdus pilaris, Though a percher by day, roosts on the ground.
2
Though a percher by day, roosts on the ground.
3
It would sometimes take refuge in a bush, when the lark, not being a percher, would alight upon the ground beneath it.
4
He tells us the young are known as branchers or perchers.
5
There are two families, however, of perchers, those that call and the song-birds.
1
She perched on the stile as light as a perchingbird, and drew her lithe figure on one side to make room for Paul.
2
The visitor next approaches the varieties of the family known as the tooth-beaked perchingbirds.
3
The perchingbirds would therefore have arisen by later adaptations after the power of flight had been evolved.
4
The perchingbirds are subdivided into five families: the Wide-gaping; the Slender-Beaked; the Toothed-Beaked; the Cone-Beaked; and the Climbers, or Scansores.
5
"There is," says Dr. Woodward, "a typical bird's 'merrythought' between the wings, and the hind leg is exactly that of a perchingbird."