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This is too good not to share. Fri, 19 Sep 2025 16:37:22 GMT
A travel companion you didn't know you needed Fri, 19 Sep 2025 13:57:16 GMT
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From: "Travel Tech Insider" <SmartLivingPicks@...
To: [email protected]
Date: Fri, 19 Sep 2025 13:57:16 GMT
Subject: A travel companion you didn't know you needed

Plain Text

A travel companion you didn't know you needed

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matically around the time of the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event 66 million years ago, which killed off the pterosaurs and all non-ornithuran dinosaurs.

Many social species preserve knowledge across generations (culture). Birds are social, communicating with visual signals, calls, and songs, and participating in such behaviour as cooperative breeding and hunting, flocking, and mobbing of predators. T
he vast majority of bird species are socially (but not necessarily sexually) monogamous, usually for one breeding season at a time, sometimes for years, and rarely for life. Other species have breeding systems that are polygynous (one male with many
females) or, rarely, polyandrous (one female with many males). Birds produce offspring by laying eggs which are fertilised through sexual reproduction. They are usually laid in a nest and incubated by the parents. Most birds have an extended period o
f parental care after hatching.

Many species of birds are economically important as food for human consumption and raw material in manufacturing, with domesticated and undomesticated birds being important sources of eggs, meat, and feathers. Songbirds, parrots, and other species ar
e popular as pets. Guano (bird excrement) is harvested for use as a fertiliser. Birds figure throughout human culture. About 120 to 130 species have become extinct due to human activity since the 17th century, and hundreds more before then. Human act
ivity threatens about 1,200 bird speci


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