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Flux Schnell
The Bishop's ʻōʻō (Moho Bishopi) was known for its glossy black plumage and distinctive yellow feather tufts. It primarily inhabited the montane forests of Molokai, Maui, and Lanai. The bird fed on nectar from native Hawaiian flowers, particularly lobelioids.
It was discovered in 1892 by Henry C. Palmer, a bird collector for Lionel Walter Rothschild. Lionel named the bird in honor of Charles Reed Bishop, the founder of the Bishop Museum in Honolulu.
Entry for 'Extinct Creatures' challenge. I dumped so many credits into it, because the anatomy was difficult to get right. T_T
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"Bishopi Moho, small bird with black thin long curved beak and very long drooping tail feathers, black feathers with circular yellow patches on the side of its eyes, top of the wings, and under the base of the tail, perched on mamane shrub branch with yellow blooms, in serene rainforest, Archibald Thorburn's watercolor style with soft brush strokes, naturalistic details, and muted colors, emphasizing unique features, Joseph Wolf, and Martin Johnson Heade's influences"
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