
Bird Pictures & Facts | National Geographic
About Birds Birds are vertebrate animals adapted for flight. Many can also run, jump, swim, and dive. Some, like penguins, have lost the ability to fly but retained their wings.
Birds - National Geographic Kids
Birds are warm-blooded vertebrates (vertebrates have backbones) and are the only animals with feathers. Although all birds have wings, a few species can't fly.
Why do birds sing so loudly in the morning in spring? It’s the ‘dawn ...
Apr 10, 2025 · Why is it a ‘dawn’ chorus? But why birds sing in the early morning is still “an open question,” says Mike Webster, an ornithologist at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology.
These flamboyant birds are the 17,000th species to enter Nat Geo's ...
Jul 8, 2025 · Looking across the assortment of birds featured here, you’ll notice that each species is vastly different from the others, either in color, shape, or feather arrangement.
A robot taught these birds a long-lost birdsong - National Geographic
Mar 7, 2025 · Using an innovative approach that combined advanced technology, scientists developed a “robotic tutor,” a device capable of emitting the forgotten melody so that young birds could learn from it.
New Bird of Paradise Species Confirmed in New Guinea
Apr 18, 2018 · The team expects to find more birds of paradise species in New Guinea's biodiverse forests, which are so isolated and remote that human development has not encroached greatly on …
These birds form mesmerizing clouds in the sky. Scientists may finally ...
Mar 4, 2025 · Before descending to their nighttime roosts, the birds put on one of nature’s most spectacular displays.
Birds | National Geographic
Birds Animals How to see the majestic migration of sandhill cranes this spring Animals
How many birds are there in the world? | National Geographic
May 17, 2021 · New research estimates there are between 50 billion and 430 billion birds on Earth.
Secretary bird, facts and photos | National Geographic
Secretary birds can be found in a number of protected areas across their large range, but scientists say better monitoring is needed to track their numbers and quantify their decline in some areas.