Rare bird in the world The Bishop's Moloka ( Moho bishopi ) is a member of the extinct genus of the ( Moho ) within the extinct family Mohoidae . It was previously regarded as member of the Australo-Pacific honeyeaters (Meliphagidae). Lionel Walter Rothschild named it after Charles Reed Bishop , the founder of the Bishop Museum . Description It was discovered in 1892 by Henry C. Palmer, a bird collector for Lord Rothschild. Its length was about 29 centimeters. The tail had reached a length of 10 centimeters. The plumage was general glossy black with yellow feather tufts on the maxillaries, beneath the wings and the undertail coverts. Their songs were simple two notes, took-took, which could be heard for miles. Distribution It was endemic to the montane forests in the eastern of the Hawaiian Island of Molokai , and Mount Olokai. Subfossil bone finds from Maui , on Mount Olinda at about 4,500 ft above sea level are sometimes referred to in literature as the Maui. E
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