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elepaio

or 'el·e·pai·o

[ el-uh-pahy-oh ]

noun

, plural el·e·pai·os.
  1. a small brown-backed or gray-backed Hawaiian flycatcher, Chasiempis sandwichensis, having white wing bars, a white rump, and a blackish cocked tail.


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Word History and Origins

Origin of elepaio1

First recorded in 1855–60; from Hawaiian ʿelepaio
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Example Sentences

They include iiwi and elepaio birds, a tree snail called pupu kani oe and the Hawaiian hoary bat, also known as opeapea.

However, the elepaio, an endangered native bird, lives in the lowland forests, as does the amakihi, an endemic honeycreeper that is not classified as endangered, he noted.

Mongooses and rodents have caused extinctions and severe declines of many Hawaiian native species, including the Oahu elepaio, Oahu tree snails and native palms, according to the agency.

Songbirds are generally shy and retreat from humans, but the elepaio is curious and will often closely approach and even follow a single person through the forest.

Canoe builders consider this bird a guardian spirit, and it is said that if the insect-eating elepaio shows interest in a koa tree, it is a sign that it is infested with insects and thus a poor choice for a canoe.

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