2006
DOI: 10.11609/jott.zpj.1574b.2454-8
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Feeding of the captive kiwi

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Cited by 9 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…Kiwi were housed in brooder boxes wooden boxes with soil, food, and water. Captive kiwi eat a diet mainly consisting of ox heart, cat biscuits, and rolled oats [34]. If positive for parasites or infections, individuals are administered antiprotozoal or antibiotic treatment.…”
Section: Study System Captivementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Kiwi were housed in brooder boxes wooden boxes with soil, food, and water. Captive kiwi eat a diet mainly consisting of ox heart, cat biscuits, and rolled oats [34]. If positive for parasites or infections, individuals are administered antiprotozoal or antibiotic treatment.…”
Section: Study System Captivementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Only the tongue of the kiwi varies significantly, being thinner and less triangular than in other taxa [55], reflecting the shape of the long and narrow bill. The narrow tongue of the kiwi is likely a result of dietary specialisation; the elongated bill is required for detecting buried or submerged prey using vibration-sensitive mechanoreceptors [56, 57]. The cassowary tongue corpus has a smooth and rounded rostral apex as in tinamous and ostriches, although varying from the pointed tip of the rhea tongue ([24], p., 372, [49]).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Only the tongue of the kiwi varies significantly, being thinner and less triangular than in other taxa [55], reflecting the shape of the long and narrow bill. The narrow tongue of the kiwi is likely a result of dietary specialisation; the elongated bill is required for detecting buried or submerged prey using vibration-sensitive mechanoreceptors [56,57]. The cassowary tongue corpus has a smooth and rounded rostral apex as in tinamous and ostriches, although varying from the pointed tip of the rhea tongue [24 p. 372, 49].…”
Section: Paraglossum-mentioning
confidence: 99%