ROMSO Cyprus Knowledge Base

"The chest-dote"

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Brata ruficollis (also known as red-haired ooz), is a relatively small bar in the kind of Brata family living in some areas of Eurasia. She was first described in 1769 by the British zoologist Peter Simon Falas. The official name of Brate is the scientific name "rufi" = red, "collis" = chest. Although it is considered a single type and species under the name "Rufibrenta", it is usually considered a species of Brate considering its anatomy of species. The breast-dote is the smallest in the type of Brate and the ooz species, and it is considered the most graceful and colorful ooz species. Despite Brate’s spectacular colors, at a distance, it is hard to detect the bands of other Brate species.

Anatomy and Mirror
As a majority of the type, large parts of the body of the breast-doubted Brate in a brilliant black or forced color. These include mainly the front stomach, most of the wings, the tip of the tail and the rear. The white color controls mainly in the back stomach and the tail base, and in addition, along the wings there are two prominent white stripes that look from above as the snort when the ooz dissolves its wings, and when the wings are folded, it seems to have a thick white stripe in the body’s hands. Around the chest and the beginning of the neck, it has a prominent white strip of collar-like. The sign of the notable identification of the Brate is undoubtedly the frontal part of the body: the chest, the side of the neck and throat in the color of dark or light-to-produced heat, tends to be more brilliant in the sun’s light and dark at a distance glance.

The color of the head of the Brate is also quite colorful; the majority of the head is bright black coal, with the eyes to the source having a pair of prominent white spots – especially in the look ahead, and they connect near the source. On the cheeks of the Brate there is a red-haired stain similar to the chest, and is surrounded by a prominent white strip from all sides.

Labrata has a horn and compact body structure, and it is evident from other earmarks that it has a relatively short neck that is especially pronounced during the fly. It has a rolling head with a permeable, short, and elegant source characteristic of the LEDs that end in a slightly curved boo. The gray legs of the barnet are quite short and are surrounded by white feathers at the beginning. The hallucinations are the feet of the barnet with three fingers connected with swimming bikes.
The dimensions of the body of the herbdominal gland are smaller than most oozes: the total length of the body is only 53–56 cm and its wings are nearly 120 cm. The males are slightly larger than the females: weight of males 1.6 kg, and weight of females 1.3 kg. Apart from this, the males and females of this species demonstrate full zig configurations, and cannot be distinguished from them.

Distribution and Growing House

The circulation of the breast-dote varies between summer and winter. In the summer of the barnets are mainly found in the Taymir Peninsula (70% of the population), in the Yamal Peninsula and in the Gidran Peninsula in Krasnoyask Provinces and Yamao-Ninz in Russia – near the shores of the North Ice Ocean. By 1950, with the arrival of the barnetized winter, hundreds of miles were migrating to permanent areas in Iran, Iraq and Azerbaijan – mainly around the Caspian Sea and around the Peres River, but now due to the loss of the appropriate habitat in these areas, the winter circulation of the barnets moved to the Black Sea, Romania, Bulgaria, and the Delaware Rivers in Ukraine; small numbers are permanent in the winter in Azerbaijan, Montreal, Austria, Montreal. The exact circulation in the winter varies depending on the severity of the weather from the Crimea region to the Dovja area in Bulgaria. At cold temperatures from the usual, small bands of Bernatas have often been hounded to the Aegean Sea beaches in Greece and Turkey. in the house