Other black and white honeyeaters are much smaller, including the Crescent (P. pyrrhoptera), Tawny-crowned (Gliciphila melanops) and White-fronted Honeyeaters (P. albifrons).
Black-crowned Night Heron | Tawny Kitaen | Red-crowned Crane | Painted Honeyeater | White-naped Honeyeater | Swan River Honeyeater | Strong-billed Honeyeater | Silver-crowned Friarbird | Brown-headed Honeyeater | Blue-faced Honeyeater | White-fronted Honeyeater | Tawny-tufted Toucanet | Tawny Tit-Spinetail | Tawny Frogmouth | Tawny-crowned Honeyeater | Ruby-crowned Kinglet | Purple-crowned Fairywren | Grey-crowned Babbler | Golden-crowned Kinglet | Crescent Honeyeater | Black-headed Honeyeater | Black-chinned Honeyeater | Yellow-crowned Amazon | White-lined Honeyeater | Singing Honeyeater | Red-crowned Parakeet | Helmeted Honeyeater | Grey Crowned Crane | Golden-crowned Manakin | Crowned Woodnymph |
Tawny-chested breeds from eastern Nicaragua to northeastern Costa Rica, although all Nicaraguan records are historical specimens collected near Lake Nicaragua or its outflow.
Holding the coat of arms and seal are two golden Tawny eagles, which have black stars on a band of the national colors hanging around the neck.
Ctenophorus decresii (A.M.C. Duméril & Bibron, 1837) – tawny crevice dragon, tawny dragon
The plumage of both subspecies is very similar to that of the related Spot-billed, Tawny-tufted and Gould's Toucanets.
Pilosella aurantiaca, the fox-and-cubs, orange hawkweed, tawny Hawkweed, Devil's paintbrush or Grim-the-collier, a flowering plant species native to alpine regions of central and southern Europe
The Tawny Mime flies slowly in the sunshine in glades and clearings of Oak (Quercus) forests usuually 10 to 12 feet above the ground.
When the children transform into Captain Thunder, Tawny becomes a Smilodon in armor (looking not unlike He-Man's companion Battle Cat).
Predators of the Tawny Owl include large birds such as Ural and Eagle Owls, Northern Goshawks, Golden Eagles, and Common Buzzards.
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The Tawny is capable of catching smaller owls, but is itself vulnerable to the Eagle Owl or Northern Goshawk.
It breeds in Caribbean lowlands and foothills up to 1000 m altitude from eastern Nicaragua to northern Costa Rica, although all Nicaraguan records are historical specimens collected near Lake Nicaragua or its outflow.