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This bird's beak is perfect for sipping nectar from tubular flowers. |
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It's an 'I'iwi... |
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a long-billed honey creeper only found in Hawaii. |
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But when blown to these shores four million years ago,400 |
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its ancestors looked very different. |
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Those first Hawaiian honey creepers were finch-like, |
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with short bills, perhaps quite similar to this modern honey creeper, the palila. |
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Its stout bill is perfect for ripping open tough seed pods. |
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But once here, the honey creepers made the most of it, |
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evolving into a variety of birds with some very distinctive bills. |
[00:47.91] |
The Maui parrotbill has a strong, hooked beak |
[00:51.50] |
for getting at the grubs inside dead wood. |
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And then there's the 'akiapola'au, |
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with one of the most remarkable beaks of any bird. |
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Its lower mandible is straight and chisel-like |
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and can puncture the bark to drink the sap... |
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..while its upper mandible is long and curved for winkling out grubs. |
[01:28.56] |
It's as close as a bill gets to a Swiss Army penknife. |
[01:32.36] |
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