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- Q31769 subject Q6452010.
- Q31769 subject Q7059970.
- Q31769 subject Q7060493.
- Q31769 subject Q8301302.
- Q31769 subject Q8515118.
- Q31769 abstract "The white-throated needletail (Hirundapus caudacutus), also known as needle-tailed swift or spine-tailed swift, is a large swift. It is commonly reputed to reach speeds of up to 170 km/h (105 mph), though this has not been verified.These birds have very short legs which they use only for clinging to vertical surfaces. They build their nests in rock crevices in cliffs or hollow trees. They never settle voluntarily on the ground and spend most of their lives in the air, living on the insects they catch in their beaks.These swifts breed in rocky hills in central Asia and southern Siberia. This species is migratory, wintering south in the Indian Subcontinent, Southeast Asia and Australia. It is a rare vagrant in western Europe, but has been recorded as far west as Norway, Sweden and Great Britain. In June 2013, the bird was spotted in the United Kingdom, the first sighting in 22 years. This bird flew into a wind turbine and died; its body was sent to a museum.The white-throated needletail is a mid-sized bird, similar in size to an Alpine swift, but a different build, with a heavier barrel-like body. They are black except for a white throat and white under-tail, which extends on to the flanks, and a somewhat paler brown back.The Hirundapus needletailed swifts get their name from the spiny end to the tail, which is not forked as in the Apus typical swifts.The white-throated needletail was first described by the English ornithologist John Latham in 1801 under the binomial name Hirundo caudacuta.".
- Q31769 binomialAuthority Q334364.
- Q31769 class Q5113.
- Q31769 conservationStatus "LC".
- Q31769 conservationStatusSystem "IUCN3.1".
- Q31769 family Q26617.
- Q31769 genus Q135898.
- Q31769 kingdom Q729.
- Q31769 order Q26617.
- Q31769 phylum Q10915.
- Q31769 thumbnail White-throated_Needletail_09a.jpg?width=300.
- Q31769 wikiPageWikiLink Q10915.
- Q31769 wikiPageWikiLink Q11708.
- Q31769 wikiPageWikiLink Q135898.
- Q31769 wikiPageWikiLink Q1390.
- Q31769 wikiPageWikiLink Q20.
- Q31769 wikiPageWikiLink Q216507.
- Q31769 wikiPageWikiLink Q23666.
- Q31769 wikiPageWikiLink Q26617.
- Q31769 wikiPageWikiLink Q310465.
- Q31769 wikiPageWikiLink Q321267.
- Q31769 wikiPageWikiLink Q334364.
- Q31769 wikiPageWikiLink Q34.
- Q31769 wikiPageWikiLink Q36642.
- Q31769 wikiPageWikiLink Q408.
- Q31769 wikiPageWikiLink Q48.
- Q31769 wikiPageWikiLink Q49833.
- Q31769 wikiPageWikiLink Q5113.
- Q31769 wikiPageWikiLink Q5428.
- Q31769 wikiPageWikiLink Q60140.
- Q31769 wikiPageWikiLink Q6452010.
- Q31769 wikiPageWikiLink Q6607593.
- Q31769 wikiPageWikiLink Q7059970.
- Q31769 wikiPageWikiLink Q7060493.
- Q31769 wikiPageWikiLink Q729.
- Q31769 wikiPageWikiLink Q8301302.
- Q31769 wikiPageWikiLink Q8515118.
- Q31769 classis Q5113.
- Q31769 familia Q26617.
- Q31769 genus "Hirundapus".
- Q31769 name "White-throated needletail".
- Q31769 ordo Q26617.
- Q31769 phylum Q10915.
- Q31769 regnum "Animalia".
- Q31769 status "LC".
- Q31769 statusSystem "IUCN3.1".
- Q31769 type Animal.
- Q31769 type Bird.
- Q31769 type Eukaryote.
- Q31769 type Species.
- Q31769 type Thing.
- Q31769 type Q19088.
- Q31769 type Q729.
- Q31769 comment "The white-throated needletail (Hirundapus caudacutus), also known as needle-tailed swift or spine-tailed swift, is a large swift. It is commonly reputed to reach speeds of up to 170 km/h (105 mph), though this has not been verified.These birds have very short legs which they use only for clinging to vertical surfaces. They build their nests in rock crevices in cliffs or hollow trees.".
- Q31769 label "White-throated needletail".
- Q31769 depiction White-throated_Needletail_09a.jpg.
- Q31769 name "White-throated needletail".