- Scissor-billed Koa-finch
Taxobox
name = Scissor-billed Koa Finch
status = EX
regnum =Animalia
phylum =Chordata
classis = Aves
ordo =Passeriformes
familia =Drepanididae
genus = "Rhodacanthis "
species = "R. forfex"
binomial = "Rhodacanthis forfex"
binomial_authority = James & Olson, 2005The Scissor-billed Koa Finch, ("Rhodacanthis forfex") or Scissor Finch is a Hawaiian bird of the family
Drepanididae . Of the four species in the genus "Rhodacanthis ", the Scissor-billed Koa Finch and thePrimitive Koa-finch becameextinct before the arrival of the first Europeans to Hawaii in 1778. It was endemic to theHawaiian Islands , probably due to activity of the volcanoMauna Kea on the Big Island.Description & Behavior
The bird is about six inches longFact|date=November 2007. Its bill is unusual in the way the upper and lower mandible appear to act like a scissor. It would have been capable of slicing into flowers and lap up the nectar. Alternatively, it could have have used its bill to cut up bark and reach for insects hidden within. Fact|date=November 2007.
Threats and conservation
Due to its early extinction, very little is known about this species. It is only known from
fossil remains. OtherHawaiian honeycreeper s are known to have become extinct or very rare due to habitat loss, introduced predators and avian diseases. It is possible the extinction of the Scissor-billed Koa Finch also involved these factors.References
BirdLife International (2004). Vestiaria coccinea. 2006 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. IUCN 2006. Retrieved on 11 May 2006. Database entry includes a brief justification of why this species is near threatened.
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