From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #9115 Reply-To: ammf@fruvous.com Sender: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest Thursday, June 9 2022 Volume 14 : Number 9115 Today's Subjects: ----------------- New York's Best Bagels delivers Nationwide ["New York Bagels" Subject: New York's Best Bagels delivers Nationwide New York's Best Bagels delivers Nationwide http://heartburnmore.za.com/PJB_YdCMHDQ6_9XJ-iirYXH_UhoibcpfAnsNopPFtUZqqYgOPw http://heartburnmore.za.com/32J0deUi3ImdUfoap_HELYSwVuZfOMSYAHaAeob3rmvY7wt8Vw ornithologist Sidney Dillon Ripley found the white swamphen to be intermediate between the takah? and the purple swamphen in 1977, based on patterns of the leg-scutes, and reported that X-rays of bones also showed similarities with the takah?. He considered only the Vienna specimen to be a white swamphen, whereas he considered the Liverpool specimen to be an albino Australasian swamphen (listing P. stanleyi as a junior synonym of that bird) from New Zealand. In 1991, the ornithologist Ian Hutton reported subfossil bones of the white swamphen. Hutton agreed that the birds described as having white-and-blue feathers were hybrids between the white swamphen and the Australasian swamphen, an idea also considered by the ornithologists Barry Taylor and Ber van Perlo in 2000. In 2000, the writer Errol Fuller said that since swamphens are widespread colonists, it would be expected that populations would evolve similarly to the takah? when they found refuges without mammals (losing flight and becoming bulkier with stouter legs, for example); this was the case with the white swamphen. Fuller suggested that they could be called "white takah?s", which had been alluded to earlier; the white birds may have been a colour morph of the population, or the blue birds may have been Australasian swamphens which associated with the white birds. In 2015, the biologists Juan C. Garcia-R. and Steve A. Trewick analysed the DNA of the purple swamphens. They found that the white swamphen was most closely related to the Philippine swamphen (P. pulverulentus), and the black-backed swamphen (P. ind ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 8 Jun 2022 11:31:49 -0400 From: "Blood Sugar Secret" <5SecondHack@whowhoplsu.za.com> Subject: Perfect blood sugar in 5-seconds? Just do THIS... Perfect blood sugar in 5-seconds? Just do THIS... http://whowhoplsu.za.com/_OF0jd8sLCxqT6HBWxXXvbmAv_UcUD3yESO1UbY2Zq53eY8z6w http://whowhoplsu.za.com/4HxF4mnQXC41YOdmJRBvNhUreqCk1vG8VejAiVtJZtacPd_87A tail and beak are damaged, and cannot be reliably measured. The white swamphen differed from most other swamphens (except the Australasian swamphen) in having a short middle toe; it is the same length as the tarsus, or longer, in other species. The white swamphen's tail was also the shortest. Both specimens have a claw (or spur) on their wings; it is longer and more discernible in the Vienna specimen, and sharp and buried in the feathers of the Liverpool specimen. This feature is variable among other kinds of swamphen. The softness of the rectrices (tail feathers) and the lengths of the secondary and wing covert feathers relative to the primary feathers appear to have been intermediate between those of the purple swamphen and the takah?. Although the known skins are mostly white, contemporary illustrations depict some blue individuals; others had a mixture of white and blue feathers. Their legs were red or yellow, but the latter colour may be present only on dried specimens. The bill and frontal shield were red, and the iris was red or brown. According to notes written on an illustration by an unknown artist (in the collection of the artist Thomas Watling, inaccurately dated 1792), the chicks were black and became bluish-grey and then white as they matured. The Vienna specimen is pure white, but the Liverpool specimen has yellowish reflections on its neck and breast, blackish-blue feathers speckled on the head (concentrated near the upper surface of the shield) and neck, blue feathers on the breast, and purplis ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #9115 **********************************************