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    « Training Your Cat To Use The Toilet | Main | Meet Louie And Chloe »

    November 26, 2007
    Featured Squidoo Lens: Flamingos!

    Create You Squidoo Lens On A Shak Subject And You Could Be Featured On Shakadoo! Once you have built your lens, submit it to the group HERE.

    Flamingos!  by GypsyPirate

    The coolest birds from the warmest places.

    Flamingos fascinate me.  Whether they’re the real ones strutting around on their goofy legs, or the wonderful plastic ones proudly standing in my yard — they are a universal symbol of all that is tropical, and can always make me smile.  So, what’s the deal with these icons of front yard kitsch?  Let’s take a look.

    Flamingo Facts

    Nearly everyone knows what flamingos look like —pink birds with long legs. You can see them at just about every zoo. You can find them in storybooks. Images of flamingos, standing under palm trees, appear in paperweights and snow globes. Plastic flamingos make colorful lawn ornaments. But did you know that some flamingos live high up in the Andes Mountains of South America?

    Ornithologists (scientists who sturdy birds) spent many years arguing whether flamingos are more like ducks, or more like storks, until they decided that flamingos belong in a group by themselves.

    There are several physical characteristics that make flamingos stand out from other birds. Flamingos have a truly unique beak. It is angled so the birds feed while standing up and their heads lowered, scooping up and straining their meals from the water.

    Very fine lamellae fringe the inside of the flamingo’s large hooked beak. The lamellae filter the water, catching the algae and small invertebrates the bird finds in the water or soft mud. Because of this unique method of feeding, flamingos are able to live in salt lakes and some wetlands where other birds can not live for long. Newly hatched flamingos have straight beaks until about 3 months of age when the hooked bill is developed along with the lamellae lining.

    The "knee" of a flamingo is called the ankle joint. The birds can bend their ankles so that the lower legs bend forward, opposite of how human knees operate that bend backward. The "foot" of the flamingo is actually its toes. All flamingos have webbing connecting their front toes. In addition to both living in the Andes, both the Puna and Andean Flamingos have 3 toes while the rest of the flamingos have 4.

    Flamingos are found in large colonies. Some colonies are Africa are thought to have over a million flamingos. They build a mounded mud nest on gravel or a mud bed, then lay a single egg. The young flamingos are cared for and fed by their parents until about 3 months of age, the time their hooked beak and lamellae are developed read the rest…..

    To learn everything you ever wanted to know about flamingos, visit the entire lens by clicking: Flamingos!

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