Spyke

Oh, I thought it was a lord of change from total war warhammer 3

2
sh.itjust.works

It's cool that this stage idicates the adult male is changing into an adult female, its final step in development. TIL

17

Ngl, the first time my hen molted, I was verklempt. She didn't get that bad, as she tends to st it in waves rather than all at once, but I was anxious as fuck all wondering if it was molting or some kind of disease

4
lemmy.ml

Honestly shocking that we didn't discover that birds \subseteq dinosaurs until recently

7
FishFacereply
piefed.social

It's not that shocking given that all birds have feathers, and almost no dinosaur fossils had feathers until fairly recently (and they're still rare as I understand it).

The connection was made in the 19th century, it just didn't become mainstream until the 60s.

And pet peeve: "birds are dinosaurs" is only true cladistically speaking, but ordinary English is not cladistic. There is such a thing as a fish and anyone who says there isn't can fuck off.

8

Honestly I'm of the opinion that "fish" should only refer to bony fish anyway; sharks should be their own thing. But also yeah, let people live lmao

2
antonimreply
lemmy.world

Neat, but, I have to admit, completely incomprehensible to the uninitiated 😅

15
MeatPilotreply
sh.itjust.works

Don't know why the beak be like that.

I have yet to see missing feathers like that myself and I have a BUNCH of cardinals and blue jays. I do see the young "punk rocker" cardinals.

But the Internet says molting feathers is true!

The only dark horror I witnessed was when a murder of crows came into the neighborhood and used my bird bath for their dark rituals for 2 weeks.

Maybe I didn't see this kind of cardinal because they didn't complete the rites to summon it?

::: spoiler Tap for spoiler *Edited for being a moron and not reading OP :::

12
TootSweetreply
lemmy.world

But the Internet says it’s true, this is molting not mites.

The person you responded to was referring to why his beak looked weird, not to the lack of feathers on his head. But I didn't see anything in the article you posted about beaks.

3

Oops, I wasn't sure if the missing feathers were real and also thought that's gotta be mites causing it to lose feathers.

So I just learned that myself and was like "oh wow" and didn't think too much.

2

The head is normal molting. The beak damage can be from mite.

5

Banging his face repeatedly on windows, car mirrors, and anything else remotely shiny at 6 am while I’m trying to sleep, maybe?

14

You reached the end

Molting | Spyke