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Page "True owl" ¶ 5
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They and perch
They consume a wide range of prey as well as fish, usually caught by swooping down from a perch.
They are only known to reduce the growing rate of white perch.
They are mainly woodland birds that hunt by sudden dashes from a concealed perch.
They found that Nile perch, introduced by the British sixty years ago, have decimated native fish populations, leading to malnutrition in the lakeside communities.
They perch on rocks and feed at the edge of the water, but they often also grip the rocks firmly and walk down them beneath the water until partly or wholly submerged.
They are not very particular and eat spiny fish like perch and will even take sticklebacks if that is the only available prey.
They are believed to still-hunt from an elevated perch and then drop on their prey, stunning them with the impact and tearing them apart with their strong bills.
They pluck fruit from a perch or occasionally while hovering.
They are mainly insect eaters, with Eurystomus species taking their prey on the wing, and those of the genus Coracias diving from a perch to catch food items from on the ground, like giant shrikes.
They are pollinated by sunbirds, which use the spathe as a perch when visiting the flowers ; the weight of the bird on the spathe opens it to release the pollen onto the bird's feet, which is then deposited on the next flower it visits.
They can deal with prey without returning to a perch, often swallowing small prey in flight, and so can hunt over large water bodies or in estuaries that lack perches that are required by other kingfishers.
They rarely come to land and never perch in trees.
They hunt from a perch like a shrike or flycatcher.
They will occasionally fly to vegetation to glean an insect off it before returning to their perch, but they will not attempt to obtain prey from the ground.
They typically stand still on shore or in shallow water or perch upon branches and await prey.
They are similar in feeding habits to shrikes, hunting insects and other small prey from a perch on a bush or tree.
They are similar in habits to shrikes, hunting insects and other small prey from a perch on a bush.
They will perch 1 to 2 meters off the ground until they spot their prey, which is often down on the ground.
They also use rocks in water and will often perch on trees.
They often pluck the feathers off their prey on a post or other perch.
They will perch in trees overlooking the feeders, then swoop down and scatter the other birds in order to capture one in flight.
They typically look out for prey from a perch and fly down towards the ground to capture them.
They wait on an open perch and fly out to catch insects in flight, sometimes hovering to pick food off vegetation.
They wait on an open perch and fly out to catch insects in flight, sometimes hovering and then dropping to catch food on the ground.

They and with
They poured through the opening in the valley, then spread out in a long line to come at us, brandishing their lances and filling the morning with their spine-chilling scalp cry.
They lay a little too stiffly, with their eyes straining to stay closed.
They wouldn't o' stood no chance with you in a plain, straight-out shoot-down ''.
They bought rustled cattle from the outlaw, kept him supplied with guns and ammunition, harbored his men in their houses.
They have pulled out all my teeth and now she will carve out my tongue with her hacksaw!!
They include the Navy's Atlantic Command at Norfolk, Virginia, which is in contact with the Polaris subs ; ;
They, too, have fragments of the go code with them.
They saw it before I did, even with my binoculars.
They are huge areas which have been swept by winds for so many centuries that there is no soil left, but only deep bare ridges fifty or sixty yards apart with ravines between them thirty or forty feet deep and the only thing that moves is a scuttling layer of sand.
They went well-equipped with everything except knowledge of the `` outback '' country.
They lay, with the birds hopping from branch to branch above them and the bright sky peeping down at them.
They squatted on their heels with their heads bent far forward, their eyes only a few inches from the ground.
They recognized that slavery was a moral issue and not merely an economic interest, and that to recognize it explicitly in their Constitution would be in explosive contradiction to the concept of sovereignty they had set forth in the Declaration of 1776 that `` all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among them are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
They look as if they had been sculptured with an unsharpened chisel.
They embrace independent poverty, usually with a `` shack-up '' partner who will help support them.
They feel they are leagued against a hostile, persecutory world, faced with the concerted malevolent opposition of squares and their hirelings, the police.
They bring an inextricable component of value within themselves, with attractions and repulsions native to their own quality.
They move only in accordance with what is in their natures.
They were in fact quietly laughing at him, for their King wished to have nothing to do with the Western world.
They had lost twice with the radical Bryan, and were having no part of Hearst, whom they considered more radical than Bryan.
They kicked their horses through the deep water with their bare heels, drove the Rebels out of their rifle pits and captured four men.
They, however much they were in disagreement with the late Victorians over the method by which Britain was Germanized, agreed with them that the end result was the complete extinction of the previous Celtic population and civilization.
They were aware that soldiers went to town, in more ways than one, because of the monotony of camp life, to find the only release available in the absence of movies, reading rooms, and playing fields with adequate athletic equipment.
They, too, have links with the city's ills.

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