How to Make a Paper Plane / Origami Bird / Leachs Storm Petrel

  • 6 years ago
How to make an Origami Leachs Storm Petrel Paper Plane\r
\r
Tutorial by Mica\r
\r
My paper:24cm×24cm origami paper\r
\r
Subscribe \r
\r
\r
The Leachs Petrel, known in some rural areas as Carrie Chicks, is a small bird at 18--21 cm in length with a 43--48 cm wingspan. Like many other Storm-petrels, it has all-dark plumage and usually a white rump. However, dark-rumped individuals exist on the west coast of North America; they are very rare north of southern California, but the percentage increases suddenly on the United States-Mexico border where 90-100% of breeding birds are dark-rumped. In Europe, it can be readily distinguished from the European Storm Petrel and the Wilsons Storm Petrel by its larger size, forked tail, different rump pattern and flight behavior. Identification in the Americas, however, proves more difficult. On the Atlantic Coast it is very hard to separate this species from Band-rumped Storm Petrels; identification involves chareristics such as the extent of white on the rump and flight pattern. Discerning this species from others is arguably hardest on the Pacific Coast, where the dark-rumped from can be confused with at least three other all-dark Storm-petrel species. Here, identification involves close attention to wingbeats and overall color. It has a fluttering flight, and patters on the water as it picks planktonic food items from the ocean surface. Like most petrels, its walking ability is limited to a short shuffle to the burrow.\r
\r
Contrary to most species, these birds gain telomere length as they age. Telomere shortening in cell division limits the maximum lifespan of most other species. The lifespan of the Leachs Petrel is therefore theoretically limitless. This is a matter of debate, however. Studies have shown that while the telomere growth may have contributed to the eldest of specimens, young specimens exhibit telomeres that are longer, and shorten over time. The Leachs Petrel lifespan may be inconclusive, but there is no data to support the hypothesis that this species is possibly immortal.\r
\r
\r
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Recommended