Can someone help me identify the species of birds on some world coins?

Question by 1/854632/4: Can someone help me identify the species of birds on some world coins?
I have a number of world coins with birds depicted on them. I’m interested in determining the species of the birds.

Here’s a list:
1969 Mexico 20 centavos (KM #440)
1981 Bermuda 25 cents (KM # 18)
1994 Trinidad and Tobago 1 cent (KM# 29)
1992 Cayman Islands 1 cent
1970 Ecuador un sucre (KM# 78b)
1944 US Philippines one centavo (KM# 179)
1945 Mexican gold 2 Peso

Any help and species IDs will be appreciated!
Links to images in same order as above are below. Sorry about the quality, I haven’t had a chance to photo the coins myself, so these belong to other people. All of the bird depictions are the same as my coins, although some have different obverses.

http://128.192.145.172/foreign5/83mx20c.jpg

http://128.192.145.172/foreign11/96ber25.jpg (tropic bird sp.?)

http://128.192.145.172/foreign4/1994tt1.jpg

http://www.cimoney.com.ky/uploadedImages/Currency/1coin.jpg (thrush sp.?)

http://i11.ebayimg.com/02/i/000/b2/57/064d_1.JPG

http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://mycollection.usarok.net/USPI_Gallery/thumbnails/04.%25201928-M%2520One%2520Centavo%2520%2520PCGS%2520MS65%2520-%2520Rev.jpg&imgrefurl=http://mycollection.usarok.net/USPI_Gallery/index.htm&h=250&w=250&sz=19&hl=en&start=1&tbnid=ldixHAYJkKCzbM:&tbnh=111&tbnw=111&prev=/images%3Fq%3DUS%2BPhilippines%2Bone%2Bcentavo%26gbv%3D2%26svnum%3D10%26hl%3Den%26sa%3DG

http://www.freewebs.com/jyeagerworldcoins/images/mexico461.jpg

Best answer:

Answer by babus_ferrari_club
i hve em but i dk either

Add your own answer in the comments!

3 Responses

  1. Luci D. Says:

    Ecuadorian coins often have the Condor on them.
    If you could add links to where one can see the bird images that would be helpful. Take a photo of the bird images and upload them to Flickr then put the URL on your question.

    http://www.flickr.com/

    Look through J. Bond’s classic book:
    Birds of the West Indies – A Guide to the species of Birds that inhabit the Greater Antilles, Lesser Antilles and Bahama Islands.

  2. Blue T Says:

    20 Centavos – The coin has an eagle with a snake in it’s mouth. The same eagle design appears on most Mexican coinage.

    Bermuda 25 cent – The White-tailed Tropicbird (aka “Longtail”) is a national symbol of Bermuda. Like the Robin further north in North America, the Longtail signals the coming of Spring. During the winter, they stay out at sea where they sleep on the water, or apparently while flying along.

    Trinidad and Tobago – This is a hummingbird.

    Cayman Isands – Great Caiman Thrush, or Grand Cayman Thrush

    Ecuador – The third link in my sources shows a colored picture of the seal and it looks like a vulture.

    Philippines – Your picture is too small and when I googled it the reverse picture for a one centavo coin looked like the fourth link. Are you sure it’s a centavo?

    2 Peso – The coin has an eagle with a snake in it’s mouth. The same eagle design appears on most Mexican coinage.

  3. Taiping Says:

    Looks like Blue T did a good job. The 1944 Philippines one centavo has an eagle on a shield on the reverse. As for the Mexican coins there is indeed an eagle with a snake in its mouth. It is the national symbol of Mexico. Around the year 1300 an Aztec priest told his people that when they see an eagle with a snake in its mouth on a cactus, that they should build a city, they did and that city is now called Mexico city. I just added this to what Blue T already said. I did not look at your photo’s but Blue T is usually right.