Akialoa
Akialoa is an extinct genus of Hawaiian honeycreeper in the subfamily Carduelinae of the family Fringillidae.
Akialoa | |
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Lesser ʻakialoa (Akialoa obscura) | |
Scientific classification ![]() | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Aves |
Order: | Passeriformes |
Family: | Fringillidae |
Subfamily: | Carduelinae |
Genus: | †Akialoa Olson & James, 1995 |
Species | |
See text |
Species
It contains the following species:
- Lesser ʻakialoa or Hawai'i 'akialoa, Akialoa obscura - extinct (1940)
- Greater ʻakialoa - extinct
- Oʻahu ʻakialoa, Akialoa ellisiana — extinct (1940, Oahu)
- Maui Nui ʻakialoa or Lanaʻi ʻakialoa, Akialoa lanaiensis — extinct (1892, Lana'i)
- Kauaʻi ʻakialoa, Akialoa stejnegeri — extinct (1969, Kauai)
- Hoopoe-billed ʻakialoa, Akialoa upupirostris — extinct Late Quaternary (prehistoric) (Kaua'i, Oahu)
- Akialoa sp. - extinct Late Quaternary (prehistoric) (Maui)
- Giant ʻakialoa, Akialoa sp. — extinct Late Quaternary (prehistoric)
gollark: Yes.
gollark: Legacy code, beeoid. It's a complex platform.
gollark: This is a possible possibility, yes.
gollark: which could possibly be cool.
gollark: In my `writing_ideas` notes which will probably never be written I have> The world is a simulation, and a very buggy one. You can phase through walls if you walk through them at just the right angle wearing certain colors of T-shirt. Why is the clothing tear resistance code tied into collision detection? Why does it care about color? Nobody knows; it's filled with bizarre legacy code. Occasionally someone finds a really exploitable issue, runs off to certain regions of the world to “test things”, and disappears. Perhaps they manage to escape into reality somehow. Perhaps they're somehow “hired” by the admins to patch further issues. Perhaps they're just deleted to preserve stability.
See also
- Asteroid 378002 ʻAkialoa
- Hawaiian honeycreepers
- Extinct birds of Hawaii
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