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North American Crane
The north american crane shares it's habitat with birds of similar feeding needs and can be viewed in a picture collection of migrating birds.
The largest type of the bird is the whooping species that are large, snowy white with black wingtips, and have a wingspan that may reach 2.5 m. Their necks are long as well as the bill that is dark and pointed; there is a bare patch of red skin on the head that extends backward from the bill.
The north american crane shares it's habitat with birds of similar feeding needs and can be viewed in a picture collection of migrating birds.
To view a complete gallery of pictures, just click on Pictures for easy viewing!
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North American Crane -
birds, picture
Similarly whooping species are the only large white birds with black wingtips that can fly with the neck straight out in front and the legs trailing far behind. These features separate them from trumpeter swans (all white, short legs), American white pelicans (short legs, flies with neck folded against shoulders), and snow geese. The north american crane shares it's habitat with birds of similar feeding needs and can be viewed in a picture collection of migrating birds.
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