Globary

Australasian Bittern

Species

species of bird

Australasian Bittern

The Australasian bittern, or Matuku-hūrepo in Māori, is a stocky, sizeable and elusive heron-like bird native to the wetlands of Australia, New Zealand, and New Caledonia. It belongs to the bittern subfamily of the heron family Ardeidae. The Australasian bittern is best known for its cryptic plumage and behaviours, which allows it to blend into the rushes and reeds of its wetland habitats, making it particularly difficult to spot. Despite being rarely seen, Australasian bittern males have a distinct "booming" call that can carry long distances. This call is said to resemble that of a Bunyip, which is why the Australasian bittern is often known as "the Bunyip Bird" in parts of Australia.

Wikipedia →

Related · Species

animale
kingdom of multicellular eukaryotic organisms
horse
domesticated four-footed mammal from the equine family
lion
species of big cat
tiger
species of big cat
Canis lupus
species of mammal
fungi
organism belonging to kingdom Fungi
onion
species of plant
Amphibia
class of tetrapods, whose living forms include frogs, toads,

Data sourced from Wikidata (Q783076)