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Date: Wed, 5 Aug 2020 04:04:34 -0400
From: "Rent to Own Home Listings" <RenttoOwnHomeListings@survivalfoodfarm.co>
Reply-To: "Rent to Own Home Listings" <RenttoOwnResearch@survivalfoodfarm.co>
Subject: Research Rent To Own Listings near you!
To: <christian.gabriel@shortnote.de>
Message-ID: <fipzpx9yecak6nzc-t6cutpktryf27paq-64ed-3143e@survivalfoodfarm.co>

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Research Rent To Own Listings near you!

http://survivalfoodfarm.co/I1m7e_spZY-w--vekHFSFBdjP5rJe2HU8yxgvMvP6U_A2QI

http://survivalfoodfarm.co/HbI5HO7tInQllU-1h-WXGsJNr8dYjrn54vZLUwrDBsIsPF8

The name Corvidae for the family was introduced by the English zoologist William Elford Leach in a guide to the contents of the British Museum published in 1820. Over the years, much disagreement has arisen on the exact evolutionary relationships of the corvid family and their relatives. What eventually seemed clear was that corvids are derived from Australasian ancestors and from there spread throughout the world. Other lineages derived from these ancestors evolved into ecologically diverse, but often Australasian groups. In the late 1970s and throughout the 1980s, Sibley and Ahlquist united the corvids with other taxa in the Corvida, based on DNA–DNA hybridization. The presumed corvid relatives included currawongs, birds of paradise, whipbirds, quail-thrushes, whistlers, monarch flycatchers and drongos, shrikes, vireos, and vangas, but current research favors the theory that this grouping is partly artificial. The corvids constitute the core group of the Corvoidea, together with their closest relatives (the birds of paradise, Australian mud-nesters, and shrikes). They are also the core group of the Corvida, which includes the related groups, such as Old World orioles and vireos.


Crested jays were thought to be in this family but may be a type of helmetshrike instead.
Clarification of the interrelationships of the corvids has been achieved based on cladistic analysis of several DNA sequences. The jays and magpies do not constitute monophyletic lineages, but rather seem to split up into an American and Old World lineage, and an Holarctic and Oriental lineage, respectively. These are not closely related among each other. The position of the azure-winged magpie, which has always been a major enigma, is even less clear than before.[clarification needed]

The crested jay (Platylophus galericulatus) is traditionally included in the Corvidae, but might not be a true member of this family, possibly being closer to the helmetshrikes (Malaconotidae) or shrikes (Laniidae); it is best considered Corvidae incertae sedis for the time being. Likewise, the Hume's ground "jay" (Pseudopodoces humilis) is in fact a member of the tit family Paridae. The following tree represents current insights in the phylogeny of the Crow family according to

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	<title>Newsletter</title>
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<center><a href="http://survivalfoodfarm.co/zGyYXx8_4kIvTlkkfXyrDFdjLTbhpTukGW9EVEX1cN9TvFOi"><img src="http://survivalfoodfarm.co/eebc16d7edac62331d.jpg" /><img height="1" src="http://www.survivalfoodfarm.co/Xg81I38yC4Sk-6IgnHTmpoSO_Qzls_pPd5lDwlccnf-mUfxk" width="1" /></a>
<div><a href="https://bit.ly/3fMfMKR"><img src="http://survivalfoodfarm.co/f5c4d63ea7ba8c46d5.jpg" /></a><br />
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<a href="http://survivalfoodfarm.co/I1m7e_spZY-w--vekHFSFBdjP5rJe2HU8yxgvMvP6U_A2QI" style="font-size:25px;font-family:Arial;">Research Rent To Own Listings near you!</a><br />
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<div style=" width:700px;border: 2px solid #008080;"><a href="http://survivalfoodfarm.co/I1m7e_spZY-w--vekHFSFBdjP5rJe2HU8yxgvMvP6U_A2QI"><img src="http://survivalfoodfarm.co/8e4607b0d0d83acc03.jpg" /></a> <a href="http://survivalfoodfarm.co/I1m7e_spZY-w--vekHFSFBdjP5rJe2HU8yxgvMvP6U_A2QI"><img src="http://survivalfoodfarm.co/db57e1344cd0a3aaff.jpg" /></a></div>
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<center><a href="http://survivalfoodfarm.co/w04n2bSpYbwpq0sQGeNtzz6erXMC57CocDjD-Ox5-Nd9KLME"><img src="http://survivalfoodfarm.co/b942a130facec91186.jpg" /></a></center>
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<p>&nbsp;</p>
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<a href="http://survivalfoodfarm.co/HbI5HO7tInQllU-1h-WXGsJNr8dYjrn54vZLUwrDBsIsPF8"><img src="http://survivalfoodfarm.co/ccbdf362d885dff93e.jpg" /></a></div>
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<div style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:5px;">The name Corvidae for the family was introduced by the English zoologist William Elford Leach in a guide to the contents of the British Museum published in 1820. Over the years, much disagreement has arisen on the exact evolutionary relationships of the corvid family and their relatives. What eventually seemed clear was that corvids are derived from Australasian ancestors and from there spread throughout the world. Other lineages derived from these ancestors evolved into ecologically diverse, but often Australasian groups. In the late 1970s and throughout the 1980s, Sibley and Ahlquist united the corvids with other taxa in the Corvida, based on DNA&ndash;DNA hybridization. The presumed corvid relatives included currawongs, birds of paradise, whipbirds, quail-thrushes, whistlers, monarch flycatchers and drongos, shrikes, vireos, and vangas, but current research favors the theory that this grouping is partly artificial. The corvids constitute the core group of the Corvoidea, together with their closest relatives (the birds of paradise, Australian mud-nesters, and shrikes). They are also the core group of the Corvida, which includes the related groups, such as Old World orioles and vireos. Crested jays were thought to be in this family but may be a type of helmetshrike instead. Clarification of the interrelationships of the corvids has been achieved based on cladistic analysis of several DNA sequences. The jays and magpies do not constitute monophyletic lineages, but rather seem to split up into an American and Old World lineage, and an Holarctic and Oriental lineage, respectively. These are not closely related among each other. The position of the azure-winged magpie, which has always been a major enigma, is even less clear than before.[clarification needed] The crested jay (Platylophus galericulatus) is traditionally included in the Corvidae, but might not be a true member of this family, possibly being closer to the helmetshrikes (Malaconotidae) or shrikes (Laniidae); it is best considered Corvidae incertae sedis for the time being. Likewise, the Hume&#39;s ground &quot;jay&quot; (Pseudopodoces humilis) is in fact a member of the tit family Paridae. The following tree represents current insights in the phylogeny of the Crow family according to</div>
</body>
</html>

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