tataupa

English

Etymology

Tupian.[1]

Noun

tataupa (plural tataupas)

  1. A South American tinamou (Crypturellus tataupa).
    • 1901, “United States of Brazil: A geographical sketch”, in Bureau of the American Republics, Washington, D.C., page 52:
      Psophia and palamedea species also aid in feeding these Indians, as likewise tataupas, ypacahas, yahamis, mbatuitis, and chloritos forms. They eat nearly every feathered creature, however, from a gull upward, deriving great advantages ...
    • 1921, The Avicultural Magazine, page 89:
      In the case of the Tataupas bred in 1904, no less than fourteen young birds were reared in the one season from a single female and two males. When male No. 1 commenced to incubate his batch of four pink eggs, the female was transferred ...

References

  1. tataupa”, in The Century Dictionary [], New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911, →OCLC.
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