Hawaiian stilt (aeʻo)

E812240

The Hawaiian stilt (aeʻo) is an endangered wading bird native to Hawaii, recognized for its long pink legs and black-and-white plumage, and found primarily in coastal wetlands and marshes.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

All labels observed (2)

Label Occurrences
Hawaiian stilt 1
Hawaiian stilt (aeʻo) canonical 1

Statements (51)

Predicate Object
instanceOf bird
subspecies
breedingHabitat shallow wetlands with mudflats
class Aves
clutchSize 3–4 eggs
commonName Hawaiian stilt NERFINISHED
aeʻo
conservationStatus endangered
culturalSignificance native Hawaiian culture
diet aquatic invertebrates
insects
small crustaceans
worms
endemicTo Hawaii NERFINISHED
family Recurvirostridae NERFINISHED
foragingBehavior wading in shallow water
foundOnIsland Hawaiʻi Island NERFINISHED
Kauaʻi NERFINISHED
Lānaʻi NERFINISHED
Maui NERFINISHED
Molokaʻi NERFINISHED
Oʻahu NERFINISHED
habitat coastal wetlands
freshwater wetlands
marshes
salt ponds
shallow ponds
kingdom Animalia
legColor pink
listedAs endangered species
listedUnder U.S. Endangered Species Act NERFINISHED
nativeTo Hawaiian Islands NERFINISHED
nestType ground nest
notableFeature very long legs
order Charadriiformes NERFINISHED
parentTaxon Himantopus mexicanus NERFINISHED
phylum Chordata
plumageColor black-and-white
predator dog
feral cat
mongoose
rat
protectedBy wildlife refuges in Hawaii
scientificName Himantopus mexicanus knudseni
taxonRank subspecies
threat habitat degradation
habitat loss
human disturbance
introduced predators
vernacularNameInHawaiian aeʻo
vernacularNameLanguage Hawaiian

Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Kawainui Marsh habitatFor Hawaiian stilt (aeʻo)
Kealia Pond National Wildlife Refuge protectsSpecies Hawaiian stilt (aeʻo)
this entity surface form: Hawaiian stilt