“…The triangular lingual appearance observed in all studied developmental age‐stages considered the common lingual shape in most avian species ( Abumandour, 2018; Abumandour & Gewaily, 2019; Dehkordi et al, 2010; Iwasaki & Kobayashi, 1986; Jackowiak, Skieresz‐Szewczyk, Kwieciński, Trzcielińska‐Lorych, & Godynicki, 2010; Mahdy, 2020; Parchami et al, 2010), while the elongated tongue was observed in some avian species such as house sparrow, common kestrel, Hume's tawny owl, Egyptian laughing dove, Eurasian Coot, white‐tailed eagle, and rock pigeon (Abumandour, 2018; Abumandour & El‐Bakary, 2017a; Abumandour & El‐Bakary, 2017b; Abumandour & El‐Bakary, ; Abumandour & Kandyel, 2020; Jackowiak & Godynicki, 2005). Furthermore, there are other lingual shapes recorded in some avian species that related with their feeding style such as; the oval tongue in Middendorff's bean and Domestic goose (Iwasaki et al, 1997; Jackowiak et al, 2011), the mushroom tongue in cormorants (Jackowiak et al, 2006), Brush tongue in nectarivorous avian species (Rico‐Guevara & Rubega, 2011), toothpick shaped in the Japanese pygmy woodpecker (Emura et al, 2009), and the needle tongue (Emura, 2009), while the rudimental small nonfunctional tongue observed in the Eurasian hoopoe, ratite birds (Abumandour & Gewaily, 2019; Crole & Soley, 2010a; Crole & Soley, 2010b; Jackowiak & Ludwig, 2008; Santos et al, 2011).…”