• Red Star Belgrade (Serbian football club)

    Red Star Belgrade, Serbian professional football (soccer) team based in Belgrade. Best known simply as Red Star, the club is the most successful team in the history of Serbian football, with more than two dozen national titles (including those won when Serbia was part of federated Yugoslavia and

  • Red Stilts (poetry by Kooser)

    Ted Kooser: …and Selected Poems (2018), and Red Stilts (2020). His nonfiction work included Local Wonders: Seasons in the Bohemian Alps (2002) and The Poetry Home Repair Manual: Practical Advice for Beginning Poets (2005), a guidebook to writing poetry.

  • Red Stockings (American baseball team)

    Cincinnati Reds, American professional baseball franchise based in Cincinnati, Ohio. The Reds play in the National League (NL) and were founded in 1882. They have won five World Series titles (1919, 1940, 1975, 1976, 1990) and nine NL pennants. The city of Cincinnati lays claim to hosting the first

  • Red Stockings (American baseball team [1966–present])

    The Atlanta Braves are the only existing Major League Baseball (MLB) franchise to have played every season since professional baseball came into existence. Founded in Boston in 1871, the franchise has moved twice: it began playing in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in 1953 and then in Atlanta in 1966. The

  • Red Stone Dancer (work by Gaudier-Brzeska)

    Henri Gaudier-Brzeska: …in his most famous work, Red Stone Dancer (1913), a figure composed of simplified geometric forms that also retains some of the emotionalism of Rodin. Just before World War I, Gaudier-Brzeska joined Wyndham Lewis’s Vorticist movement, which advocated abstraction and an embrace of the machines and energy of modern life.…

  • red stoneware (stoneware)

    stoneware: Böttger developed a red stoneware (in fact, varying from red to dark brown) about 1707. Decoration included applied reliefs, engraving, faceting, and polishing. Because of the vogue for porcelain, stoneware manufacture declined in Germany in the 18th century and was finally abandoned about 1730. In the Netherlands, also…

  • Red Storm Rising (novel by Clancy)

    Tom Clancy: Red Storm Rising (1986), Patriot Games (1987; film 1992), Clear and Present Danger (1989; film 1994), The Sum of All Fears (1991; film 2002), Rainbow Six (1998), The Bear and the Dragon

  • red summer cypress (plant)

    burning bush: Red summer cypress, or firebush (Bassia scoparia), is also called burning bush (see Bassia), as is Combretum microphyllum, the flame creeper of Mozambique, a rambling shrub with scarlet flower spikes.

  • Red Sun (film by Young [1971])

    Alain Delon: …Across the River (1966), and Red Sun (1971). He failed to catch on with American audiences, however, despite his prominence in Europe and in Japan. His subsequent films included Monsieur Klein (1976), Notre histoire (1984; Our Story), Nouvelle vague (1990; “New Wave”), and 1 chance sur 2 (1998; Half a…

  • red surmullet (fish)

    goatfish: …known of these is the red surmullet, or red mullet (Mullus barbatus), of the Mediterranean, which was one of the most highly prized food fishes of the ancient Romans. Very similar is another European species, M. surmuletus.

  • red tai (fish)

    porgy: …Japan a related species, the red tai (C. major), is another important food fish.

  • Red Tai (people)

    Laos: Ethnic groups and languages: …Dam and Tai Deng (Red Tai; so named after their red clothing), among others.

  • Red Tails (film by Hemingway [2012])

    George Lucas: The growth of Lucasfilm: …was then executive producer of Red Tails (2012), an action-packed account of the Tuskegee Airmen and his first film in nearly two decades that was not affiliated with either the Star Wars or Indiana Jones franchises.

  • Red Terror (Soviet history)

    20th-century international relations: Bolshevik diplomacy: On the other hand, the Red Terror launched by the Bolsheviks in 1918, including the murder of the royal family, convinced many in the West that this new breed was beyond the pale. U.S. Secretary of State Robert Lansing called Bolshevism “the most hideous and monstrous thing that the human…

  • Red Terror Campaign (Ethiopian history)

    Mengistu Haile Mariam: …then unleashed a bloody “Red Terror Campaign” to crush armed opponents among the civilian populace, and later that year he solicited Soviet weaponry and Cuban troops to repel an invasion of the Somali-speaking Ogaden region by Somalia. As undisputed ruler of the country, he oversaw the establishment of the…

  • Red Thumb Mark, The (work by Freeman)

    Richard Austin Freeman: The Red Thumb Mark (1907) was the first of many works featuring Thorndyke.

  • red tide (marine biology)

    red tide, discoloration of sea water usually caused by dinoflagellates, during periodic blooms (or population increases). Toxic substances released by these organisms into the water may be lethal to fish and other marine life. Red tides occur worldwide in warm seas. Up to 50 million cells per litre

  • Red Top (missile)

    rocket and missile system: Air-to-air: …infrared-homing missiles as the British Red Top and the French Magic, the latter being a short-range (one-quarter to four miles) highly maneuverable equivalent of the Sidewinder.

  • red topaz (mineral)

    topaz: …topaz” is often known as Brazilian ruby, as is the very rare, natural red topaz. Cut topazes of large size are known, and it is said that the great “Braganza diamond” of Portugal is probably a topaz.

  • Red Tram, The (poetry by Stead)

    C.K. Stead: …The Right Thing (2000), and The Red Tram (2004). Stead composed the poems in The Black River (2007) after suffering a stroke. The Yellow Buoy: Poems 2007–2012 (2013) deals largely with his European travels.

  • red tuna (fish)

    tuna: …of the group is the northern bluefin tuna, which grows to a maximum length and weight of about 4.3 metres (14 feet) and 800 kg (1,800 pounds). The yellowfin tuna reaches a maximum weight of about 180 kg (397 pounds), and the albacore grows to about 36 kg (79 pounds).

  • Red Turbans (Chinese history)

    Red Turbans, Peasant rebel movement of the mid-14th century that flourished in northern China at the end of the Yuan dynasty (1206–1368). The Red Turbans, whose leader was regarded as an incarnation of the bodhisattva Maitreya, were opposed to alien Mongol rule; their movement gained momentum from

  • red twig dogwood (plant)

    dogwood: Major species: …twig, or red osier (C. sericea), dogwood of northern and western North America has bright red twigs that are especially showy in winter and early spring; the branches are dark red in colour and the fall foliage ranges from red to purple to yellow.

  • red uakari (monkey, Cacajao calvus rubicundus subspecies)

    uakari: …faces of red uakaris (subspecies Cacajao calvus rubicundus, C. calvus novaesi, and C. calvus ucayalii) are bright red, and the coats range from reddish brown to red-orange. They live in flooded forests along the upper Amazon River and its tributaries in eastern Peru and western Brazil. The white, or bald,…

  • red uakari (monkey, Cacajao calvus novaesi subspecies)

    uakari: …uakaris (subspecies Cacajao calvus rubicundus, C. calvus novaesi, and C. calvus ucayalii) are bright red, and the coats range from reddish brown to red-orange. They live in flooded forests along the upper Amazon River and its tributaries in eastern Peru and western Brazil. The white, or bald, uakari (C. calvus…

  • red uakari (monkey, Cacajao calvus ucayalii subspecies)

    uakari: calvus novaesi, and C. calvus ucayalii) are bright red, and the coats range from reddish brown to red-orange. They live in flooded forests along the upper Amazon River and its tributaries in eastern Peru and western Brazil. The white, or bald, uakari (C. calvus calvus) is a different…

  • red valerian (plant)

    Valerianoideae: Red valerian, or Jupiter’s-beard (Centranthus ruber), native to the Mediterranean, is widely naturalized in British meadows, on roadsides, and on walls. Its billowy masses of pink, white, or red tiny fragrant blooms are borne on stems sometimes reaching 90 cm (3 feet).

  • Red Violin, The (film by Girard [1998])

    The Red Violin: …Corigliano for the 1998 Canadian film of the same name. In 1999 Corigliano’s music for the film—which follows a particular violin from its creation in the late 1600s through the centuries of its history to the late 20th century—won him an Academy Award for best original score.

  • Red Violin, The (film score by Corigliano)

    The Red Violin, film score by American composer John Corigliano for the 1998 Canadian film of the same name. In 1999 Corigliano’s music for the film—which follows a particular violin from its creation in the late 1600s through the centuries of its history to the late 20th century—won him an Academy

  • Red Volta River (river, Africa)

    Red Volta River, river in West Africa, rising in Burkina Faso (formerly Upper Volta) northwest of Ouagadougou. It flows about 200 mi (320 km) south-southeast to join the White Volta (Volta Blanche) near the Gambaga scarp in the Upper Region of Ghana. The combined rivers then turn southwestward as

  • red water (marine biology)

    red tide, discoloration of sea water usually caused by dinoflagellates, during periodic blooms (or population increases). Toxic substances released by these organisms into the water may be lethal to fish and other marine life. Red tides occur worldwide in warm seas. Up to 50 million cells per litre

  • Red Week (Italian history)

    Italy: Conduct of the war: In June, “Red Week,” a period of widespread rioting throughout the Romagna and the Marche, came in response to the killing of three antimilitarist demonstrators at Ancona. When World War I broke out in August, the Salandra government stayed neutral and began to negotiate with both sides—a…

  • Red Wheel, The (work by Solzhenitsyn)

    Aleksandr Isayevich Solzhenitsyn: …part of a projected series, Krasnoe koleso (The Red Wheel); other volumes (or uzly [“knots”]) in the series were Oktyabr 1916 (“October 1916”), Mart 1917 (“March 1917”), and Aprel 1917 (“April 1917”).

  • Red Wheelbarrow, The (poem by Williams)

    William Carlos Williams: His signature poems include “The Red Wheelbarrow” and “This Is Just to Say.”

  • red wine

    Roquefort: Dry red wine is considered an ideal accompaniment.

  • Red Wing (airplane)

    Aerial Experiment Association: …first of those aircraft, named Red Wing because of the colour of the silk covering its wings, 319 feet (97 metres) over the frozen surface of Lake Keuka, near Hammondsport, on March 12, 1908. Taking turns, the four younger members of the AEA (i.e., excluding the Bells) made a total…

  • Red Wing (Minnesota, United States)

    Red Wing, city, seat (1853) of Goodhue county, southeastern Minnesota, U.S. It lies on the Mississippi River (bridged to Wisconsin), near Lake Pepin, about 45 miles (70 km) southeast of St. Paul. In 1805 the explorer Zebulon Pike arrived at the site, which was overlooked by Barn Bluff and was then

  • red wolf (mammal)

    wolf: Other wolves: The red wolf is tawny, reddish, or black. It grows to a length of about 105–125 cm (41–49 inches), excluding the tail, which is 33–43 cm (13–17 inches) long, and weighs about 20–37 kg (44–82 pounds). It was once considered a distinct species of wolf, but…

  • Red, Hot and Blue (film by Farrow [1949])

    John Farrow: Films of the 1940s: …the decade with the comedy Red, Hot and Blue (1949), starring Betty Hutton as an aspiring actress and Victor Mature as a gangster.

  • Red, Hot and Blue (musical by Porter)

    Cole Porter: Divorcée (1932), Anything Goes (1934), Red, Hot and Blue (1934), Jubilee (1935), Dubarry Was a Lady (1939), Panama Hattie (1940), Kiss Me, Kate (1948, based on William Shakespeare’s The Taming of the Shrew), Can-Can (1953), and Silk Stockings (1955). He concurrently

  • Red, White & Royal Blue (film by Lopez [2023])

    romantic comedy: Streaming and diversification: … (2020), Fire Island (2022), and Red, White & Royal Blue (2023).

  • Red-Back Book (recording by New England Conservatory Ragtime Ensemble)

    Gunther Schuller: …Conservatory Ragtime Ensemble, whose recording The Red Back Book, consisting of works of Scott Joplin, became a best seller and won a Grammy Award in 1973.

  • red-backed lemming (rodent)

    lemming: The wood lemming (Myopus schisticolor) and steppe lemming (Lagurus lagurus) are the smallest, measuring 8 to 12 cm (3.1 to 4.7 inches) in body length and weighing 20 to 30 grams (0.7 to 1.0 ounce). The other species are larger, weighing 30 to 112 grams, with…

  • red-backed sandpiper (bird)

    dunlin, (Calidris alpina), one of the most common and sociable birds of the sandpiper group. The dunlin is a member of the family Scolopacidae (order Charadriiformes). It is about 20 cm (8 inches) long and has a bill curved downward at the tip. In breeding season, its plumage is brightly coloured,

  • red-backed shrike (bird)

    migration: In Europe: Golden orioles (Oriolus oriolus) and red-backed shrikes (Lanius collurio) go to East Africa by way of Greece and Egypt. Swallows—particularly barn swallows (Hirundo rustica) and house martins (Delichon urbica)—and swifts (Apus apus) pass the winter in Africa south of 20° N latitude, particularly in

  • red-backed squirrel monkey (primate)

    squirrel monkey: …South America, whereas the endangered Central American squirrel monkeys (S. oerstedii) have black crowns and reddish backs. The common and Central American species both have hair on the ears, unlike the bare-eared squirrel monkey (S. ustus) of central Brazil.

  • red-bellied piranha (fish)

    piranha: The most infamous is the red-bellied piranha (Pygocentrus nattereri), with the strongest jaws and sharpest teeth of all. Especially during low water, this species, which can grow up to 50 cm (about 20 inches) in length, hunts in groups that can number more than 100. Several groups can converge in…

  • red-bellied woodpecker (bird)

    woodpecker: …are the habitat of the red-bellied woodpecker (Centurus carolinus).

  • red-berried elder (plant)

    elderberry: Major species and uses: Red-berried, or American red, elder (S. pubens), with dark pith, is a similar North American species. Danewort, or dwarf, elderberry (S. ebulus), widespread in Eurasia and North Africa, is a perennial with annually herbaceous growth to 1 metre (3 feet). Its clusters of black berries…

  • red-billed leiothrix (bird)

    Leiothrix: argentauris), and the red-billed leiothrix (L. lutea), which is known to cage-bird fanciers as the Pekin, or Chinese, robin (or nightingale). Both range from the Himalayas to Indochina; L. lutea has been introduced into Hawaii, where it is commonly called hill robin. The silver-ear has yellow, gray, red,…

  • red-billed oxpecker (bird)

    oxpecker: africanus) and the red-billed (B. erythrorhynchus)—are brown, measure 20 cm (8 inches) long, and have wide bills, stiff tails, and sharp claws. They perch on and cling to cattle, zebras, rhinoceroses, and other ungulates to remove ticks, flies, and maggots from their hides; when alarmed, the

  • red-billed quelea (bird species, Quelea quelea)

    quelea, (Quelea quelea), small brownish bird of Africa, belonging to the songbird family Ploceidae (order Passeriformes). It occurs in such enormous numbers that it often destroys grain crops and, by roosting, breaks branches. Efforts to control quelea populations with poisons, napalm, pathogens,

  • red-billed weaver (bird species, Quelea quelea)

    quelea, (Quelea quelea), small brownish bird of Africa, belonging to the songbird family Ploceidae (order Passeriformes). It occurs in such enormous numbers that it often destroys grain crops and, by roosting, breaks branches. Efforts to control quelea populations with poisons, napalm, pathogens,

  • red-breasted goose (bird)

    anseriform: Anatomy: In some, such as the red-breasted goose (Branta ruficollis), the bill is short and slight, used only for grazing; in others, such as the snow goose (Anser caerulescens), it is long and heavy enough to dig for roots and tubers. The massive digging bill reaches maximum development in the magpie…

  • red-breasted merganser (bird)

    merganser: The somewhat smaller and ground-nesting red-breasted merganser (M. serrator) has a similar range. In the United States, common and red-breasted mergansers are often called sheldrakes (properly a name for the shelducks).

  • red-breasted nuthatch (bird)

    nuthatch: …in North America are the red-breasted nuthatch (Sitta canadensis), a stubby, grayish, rufous-breasted, 10-gram (0.35-ounce) bird that often boldly approaches humans in northern conifer groves, and the white-breasted nuthatch (Sitta carolinensis), a grayish, black-capped, white-breasted, 21-gram (0.74-ounce) bird that often frequents feeders, where it relishes sunflower seeds and suet.

  • red-breasted stilt (bird)

    stilt: The banded, or red-breasted, stilt (Cladorhynchus leucocephala), of Australia, is white with brown wings, reddish breast band, and yellowish legs.

  • red-breasted toucan (bird)

    toucan: …common in zoos is the red-breasted (also called green-billed) toucan (R. dicolorus) of Amazonia. Another common zoo resident is the keel-billed toucan (R. sulfuratus), which is about 50 cm (20 inches) long. It is mainly black with lemon yellow on the face, throat, and chest, bright red under the tail,…

  • red-breasted wryneck (bird)

    wryneck: The red-breasted wryneck (J. ruficollis) is African.

  • red-capped cardinal (bird)

    cardinal: For example, the red-capped cardinal (P. gularis), which is named for its conspicuous red head that contrasts with its black throat and wings, is native to a large portion of northern South America. The yellow-billed cardinal (P. capitata), a resident of Argentina, Brazil, and Paraguay, differs mainly in…

  • red-capped mangabey (primate)

    mangabey: The white-collared or red-capped mangabey (C. torquatus), the largest species, lives in west-central Africa and is gray with a white “collar” around the neck and a red crown. The white-naped mangabey (C. lunulatus) is restricted to a small region between the Nzo-Sassandra river system in Côte d’Ivoire and…

  • red-cheeked cordon bleu (bird)

    cordon bleu: …species is the 13-centimetre (5-inch) red-cheeked cordon bleu (U. bengalus), occurring from Senegal and Congo (Kinshasa) to Somalia and Zimbabwe. It is brown and pale blue, with red cheek spot (in the male only) and longish pointed tail. The two other species are the blue-capped cordon bleu (U. cyanocephalus) and…

  • red-cheeked gibbon (primate)

    gibbon: The red-cheeked gibbon (N. gabriellae) lives in southern Vietnam and eastern Cambodia.

  • red-crested cardinal (bird)

    cardinal: The red-crested cardinal (P. coronata), also known as the Brazilian cardinal, has a red head, a white belly, and gray wings. Though native to Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay, Uruguay, and Bolivia, it occasionally can be seen visiting the eastern coast of the United States. It was introduced…

  • red-crested pochard (bird)

    pochard: The drake of the red-crested pochard (Netta rufina) has a puffy yellowish red head with fuzzy erectile crown feathers, black throat and breast, and white sides. This is a more southerly species of inland waters. Mahogany-coloured relatives are the pochards of South America and Africa (N. erythrophthalma).

  • red-eyed vireo (bird)

    vireo: …species of vireo is the red-eyed vireo (Vireo olivaceus), which breeds from southern Canada to Argentina. It is 15 cm (6 inches) long, with a black-outlined white eye stripe that contrasts with the bird’s gray crown. Similar in general appearance is the white-eyed vireo (V. griseus). In Bermuda, where it…

  • red-figure pottery (art)

    red-figure pottery, type of Greek pottery that flourished from the late 6th to the late 4th century bce. During this period most of the more important vases were painted in this style or in the earlier, black-figure style. In the latter, figures were painted in glossy black pigment in silhouette on

  • red-footed booby (bird)

    booby: The red-footed booby (Sula sula) and the masked, or blue-faced, booby (S. dactylatra) are wide-ranging in the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian oceans. The blue-footed booby (S. nebouxii) occurs in the Pacific from southern California to northern Peru and on the

  • red-fronted gazelle (mammal)

    gazelle: …the smaller species—Thomson’s gazelle, the red-fronted gazelle, and the Mongalla gazelle—have become the genus Eudorcas. The Gazella genus as traditionally defined includes eight species that occur only in Africa, five that occur only in Asia, and one species that occurs both in Africa and Asia. In the revised classification, Gazella…

  • red-fruited squashberry (plant)

    Dipsacales: Adoxaceae: Red-fruited squashberry (V. edule) inhabits moist woods from Labrador to Alaska, southward into Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Minnesota, and as far west as Colorado and Oregon. Arrowwood (V. dentatum) thrives not only in moist woods but also in swamps. Possumhaw (V. nudum) is largely limited to…

  • red-green colour blindness (physiology)

    colour blindness: Inherited and acquired colour blindness: Hereditary red-green colour blindness occurs mainly in males and Caucasian persons, with about 8 percent of men and 0.5 percent of women of European ancestry inheriting the conditions. Its predominance in males is due to the fact that red-green colour blindness is a sex-linked recessive characteristic,…

  • Red-Haired Woman, The (novel by Pamuk)

    Orhan Pamuk: Works: …novel Kırmızı saçlı kadın (2016; The Red-Haired Woman) centers on the familial relationship that forms between a well digger and his apprentice. Veba gecelerı (2021; Nights of Plague), which Pamuk began writing before the COVID-19 pandemic, is a mystery that takes place in 1900 on an imaginary island between Crete…

  • red-headed vulture (bird)

    vulture: Old World vultures: …(Sarcogyps calvus), often called the Pondicherry vulture or the Indian (black) vulture, is an Old World vulture ranging from Pakistan to Malaysia. It is about 75 cm (30 inches) long and has a wingspan of about 2.7 metres (8.9 feet). It is black with white down on the breast and…

  • Red-Headed Woman (film by Conway [1932])

    Jack Conway: Heyday of the 1930s: The hit comedy Red-Headed Woman (1932), featuring a provocative pre-Code script by Anita Loos, established Jean Harlow as a star. Conway again worked with the actress on the popular The Girl from Missouri (1934). His success continued with Viva Villa! (1934), starring

  • red-headed woodpecker (bird)

    woodpecker: The red-headed woodpecker (M. erythrocephalus) is roughly the same size (19–23 cm [7.5–9 inches]) as the acorn woodpecker, but it is sparsely distributed in open woodlands, farmland, and orchards of temperate North America east of the Rocky Mountains.

  • red-jointed fiddler crab (crab)

    fiddler crab: pugilator), and the red-jointed fiddler (U. minax). These species, which range in body size from about 2.5 to 3 cm (1 to 1.2 inches), occur all along the Atlantic coast of the United States. The males of all species are more brightly coloured than the females. Colours range…

  • red-lead putty (adhesive)

    putty: …oxide and linseed oil; and red-lead putty, a mixture of red and white lead and linseed oil. Certain doughlike plastics are also called putty. Putty powder (tin oxide) is used in polishing glass, granite, and metal.

  • red-legged douc (primate)

    douc: The red-legged douc (P. nemaeus) lives from 14° to 20° N latitude. The legs are maroon below the knees, and the forearms are white. The black-shanked douc (P. nigripes) is found south of 14° N and has black legs, gray arms, and a darker face. The…

  • red-legged ham beetle (insect)

    checkered beetle: The red-legged ham beetle (Necrobia rufipes) feeds on stored meats. Some Trichodes and Hydnocera species are pollen eaters. The predatory larvae feed mainly on wood- and bark-boring beetles and are therefore beneficial to man.

  • red-legged kittiwake (bird)

    kittiwake: …bill and feet, is the red-legged kittiwake (R. brevirostris), which inhabits the region of the Bering Sea.

  • red-legged seriema (bird)

    seriema: …red-legged, or crested, seriema (Cariama cristata), with long legs and neck, stands about 60 cm (2 feet) tall. The beak and legs are red, and the plumage is brownish above and dull white beneath, with bluish skin around the eyes. It inhabits grasslands, but the nest is built in…

  • red-light district

    red-light district, area in a city where numerous people perform sex acts for money or participate in sexually evocative performances in strip clubs or other adult venues. Red-light districts are also often home to peep shows and shops selling sex toys, pornography, lingerie, and other sex-related

  • red-necked phalarope (bird)

    phalarope: …phalarope in Britain, and the northern phalarope (P. lobatus), called red-necked phalarope in Britain. Both species winter on tropical oceans, where they are known as sea snipe. Wilson’s phalarope (P. tricolor) breeds primarily in interior western North America and migrates chiefly to the Argentine pampas.

  • red-necked wallaby (marsupial)

    wallaby: A common species is the red-necked wallaby (M. rufogriseus), with reddish nape and shoulders, which inhabits brushlands of southeastern Australia and Tasmania; this species is often seen in zoos. The pretty-faced wallaby, or whiptail (M. elegans, or M. parryi), with distinctive cheek marks, is found in open woods of coastal…

  • red-out (vision disorder)

    acceleration stress: Negative acceleration stress: …condition is known as “red-out.” The mental confusion that develops at high accelerations may lead to unconsciousness.

  • red-shafted flicker (bird)

    flicker: …West (to Alaska) by the red-shafted flicker (C. cafer), considered by many authorities to represent the same species as the yellow-shafted because the two forms hybridize frequently. The campos, or pampas, flicker (C. campestris) and the field flicker (C. campestroides)—sometimes considered to be a single species—are common in east-central South…

  • red-shouldered hawk (bird)

    hawk: The red-shouldered hawk (B. lineatus), common in eastern and Pacific North America, is a reddish brown bird about 50 cm (20 inches) long, with closely barred underparts.

  • red-tailed black shark (fish)

    red-tailed black shark, fish of the carp family, Cyprinidae; a species of labeo

  • red-tailed boa (snake)

    boa constrictor: The red-tailed boa (Boa constrictor constrictor) is a popular exotic pet.

  • red-tailed hawk (bird)

    red-tailed hawk, (Buteo jamaicensis), North American bird of prey (family Accipitridae) best known for its wide wingspan, its large size, and the red coloration of the dorsal side of its tail. The species’ geographic range is vast, extending across nearly all of North America south of the Arctic

  • red-tailed squirrel (rodent)

    squirrel: Natural history: Certain species, such as the red-tailed squirrel (S. granatensis) of the American tropics and the African pygmy squirrel, are active from ground to canopy. In the United States, the Eastern fox squirrel (S. niger) runs along the ground from tree to tree, but others, including the Eastern gray squirrel (S.…

  • red-tailed tachinid (insect)

    tachinid fly: …infested by larvae of the red-tailed tachinids (Winthemia).

  • red-tailed tropic bird (bird)

    tropic bird: …the three species is the red-tailed tropic bird, Phaethon rubricauda (to 50 cm [20 inches], excepting the red streamers), of the Indian and Pacific oceans.

  • red-tailed vanga-shrike (bird)

    vanga-shrike: The smallest species is the red-tailed vanga-shrike, or tit-shrike (Calicalicus madagascariensis).

  • red-throated diver (bird)

    loon: …white markings, except in the red-throated loon (Gavia stellata), which during the summer is distinguished by a reddish brown throat patch. In winter the red-throated loon develops white speckling on the back, while the other species lose these markings.

  • red-throated loon (bird)

    loon: …white markings, except in the red-throated loon (Gavia stellata), which during the summer is distinguished by a reddish brown throat patch. In winter the red-throated loon develops white speckling on the back, while the other species lose these markings.

  • red-to-yellow soil

    India: Red-to-yellow soils: Those soils are encountered over extensive nonalluvial tracts of peninsular India and are made up of such acidic rocks as granite, gneiss, and schist. They develop in areas in which rainfall leaches soluble minerals out of the ground and results in a loss…

  • red-wattled lapwing (bird)

    lapwing: The red-wattled lapwing, Vanellus (sometimes Lobivanellus) indicus, and the yellow-wattled lapwing (V. malabaricus), of southern Asia, have wattles on the face. Others are the gray-headed lapwing (Microsarcops cinereus), of eastern Asia, and the long-toed lapwing (Hemiparra crassirostris), of Africa.

  • red-winged blackbird (bird)

    animal social behaviour: Social interactions involving sex: Some examples include the red-winged blackbird (Agelaius phoeniceus) and house wren (Troglodytes aedon) in North America and the great reed warbler (Acrocephalus arundinaceus) in Europe. In a few polygamous species, however, females mate with and accept care from multiple partners, a phenomenon referred to as polyandry, examples of which…

  • red-winged tinamou (bird)

    tinamou: Habitat selection and food habits: In summer the red-winged tinamou (Rhynchotus rufescens), for example, eats mainly animal material—largely insects, but its mouth is large enough to swallow mice. In the stomach of one bird 707 termites were counted. In winter the red-winged tinamou shifts to vegetation. It occasionally becomes a pest in agricultural…