Transmitted Off Circular Polarized Light Illumination
Definition/Function:
KINGDOM: Animalia PHYLUM: Chordata CLASS: Aves ORDER: Passeriformes FAMILILY: Turdidae
GENUS: Ixoreus SPECIES: naevius
The Varied Thrush (Ixoreus naevius) is one of the "Songbirds". Its distinctive orange
plumage on its neck, breast, wing bars, and back and the black
bar around its neck make it easy to distinguish from its cousin the Robin (Turdus
migratorius). The range of the Varied Thrush tends to be in
the dense conifer forest of western North America from California to Alaska.
Significance in the Environment:
Characteristic Features:
The base cell of the barbule of the Varied Thrush contains knobbed villi, characteristic
of many songbirds. Villi are often seen on the base
cell of barbules from hummingbirds, songbirds, some shorebirds, and woodpeckers. Pigment
is concentrated in the nodes but generally extends
down the barbule from the node and may extend the full distance between nodes. The
expanded nodes are triangular to spined and begin near
the base of the barbule. The distal nodes tend to be more triangular.
Associated Particles:
References:
Dove, Carla J. and Sandra L. Koch, "Microscopy of feathers: a practical guide for
forensic feather identification", THE MICROSCOPE, vol. 59,
no. 2, pp. 51-71, 2011
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