Less than a half-dozen Piratic Flycatchers have been noticed in the United States. The species is named for a pair's propensity to dive at birds of another species to pirate active nests that aren't open at the top (e.g., pendant nests). Adults subsist mainly on fruit but feed arthropods to their nestlings for protein. |
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2 clips, played at normal speed and half speed, and 2 levels of resolution. Seconds are playback durations (not download waits). 270p, 480p, 540p, 720p, and 1080p are lines of resolution. MB (megabytes) is proportional to download waiting time. The clips include camera settings and other information. | ||||
7 seconds | 270p | 1 MB | Piratic Flycatcher taking flight from within a mulberry tree | |
7 seconds | 540p | 4.3 MB | Piratic Flycatcher taking flight from within a mulberry tree | |
9 seconds (half speed) | 270p | 1.3 MB | Piratic Flycatcher taking flight from within a mulberry tree | |
9 seconds (half speed) | 540p | 3.2 MB | Piratic Flycatcher taking flight from within a mulberry tree | |
17 seconds | 270p | 2 MB | Piratic Flycatcher flying from a tallow tree | |
17 seconds | 540p | 7.2 MB | Piratic Flycatcher flying from a tallow tree | |
10 seconds (half speed) | 270p | 1.2 MB | Piratic Flycatcher flying from a tallow tree | |
10 seconds (half speed) | 540p | 4.2 MB | Piratic Flycatcher flying from a tallow tree | |
©2008 Malcolm Mark Swan and ManyBirds |