News Bites - National Geographic Kids

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Results tagged “Discoveries”

Thursday, November 12, 2009
kidssuperadmin

Songbird "Sings" With Feathers

Is that sound a violin? Nope! You are hearing the vibrating feathers of the male club-winged manakin. This tiny songbird lives in the cloud forests of the Andes in South America. It vibrates one type of wing feather against another at twice the speed of a hummingbird's wings to "sing" to potential mates. The sound this vibration makes sounds like a violin.



Learn more about the club-winged manakin on National Geographic News.

Check out the dance the riflebird performs to attract a mate on National Geographic Kids.

Make a bird feeder to feed hungry birds in your area this winter.
 
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
kidssuperadmin

Squishy Fish Found

This is one weird-looking fish! It's six feet (2 meters) long, has tiny teeth, a long tail, and it doesn't have scales. Guy Marcovaldi captured video footage of the fish while working on the TAMAR project, which is involved in sea turtle conservation. The fish was found off of the shore of Brazil's Bahia coast. It was dead and floating near the water's surface.

At first the fish was reported as being a newly discovered species, but David Johnson, an ichthyologist with the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, says that the fish probably belongs to a group of fish known as Jellynoses. Jellynoses are mysterious fish that live at the bottom of the ocean. Catch a glimpse of this large, gelatinous fish in this video!



Read more about this discovery on National Geographic News.

Check out pictures of more strange ocean dwellers on National Geographic Kids.
 

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