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Domestic canary

The domestic canary, often simply known as the canary (Serinus canaria forma domestica[5]), is a domesticated form of the wild canary, a small songbird in the finch family originating from the Macaronesian Islands (the Azores, Madeira and the Canary Islands).

Canary
Domestic canary
Domesticated
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Fringillidae
Subfamily: Carduelinae
Genus: Serinus
Species:
Subspecies:
S. c. domestica
Trinomial name
Serinus canaria domestica
Synonyms

Serinus canarius domesticus[3] Linnaeus 1758, I. Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, 1861[4]

Canaries were first bred in captivity in the 17th century, having been brought to Europe by Spanish sailors. Monks started breeding them and only sold the males (which sing). This kept the birds in short supply and drove the price up. Eventually, Italians obtained hens and were able to breed the birds. This made them very popular, resulting in many breeds arising, and the birds being bred all over Europe.

The same occurred in England. First the birds were only owned by the rich, but eventually the local citizens started to breed them and, again, they became very popular. Many breeds arose through selective breeding, and they are still very popular today for their voices.

From the 18th up to the 20th centuries, canaries and finches were used in the UK, Canada and the US in the coal mining industry to detect carbon monoxide. In the UK, this practice ceased in 1986.[6]

Typically, the domestic canary is kept as a popular cage and aviary bird. Given proper housing and care, a canary's lifespan ranges from 10 to 15 years.[7]

Etymology edit

The birds are named after Spain's Canary Islands, which derive their name from the Latin Insula Canaria (after one of the larger islands, Gran Canaria), meaning 'island of dogs', due to its "vast multitudes of dogs of very large size".[8]

 
A white canary nesting
 
Feral yellow canary at Midway Atoll
 
Red factor canary
 
Sleeping canary

Varieties edit

Domestic canaries are generally divided into three main groups:

  • Colour-bred canaries (bred for their many colour mutations – Ino, Eumo, Satinette, Bronze, Ivory, Onyx, Mosaic, Brown, red factor, Green (Wild Type): darkest black and brown melanin shade in yellow ground birds, Yellow Melanin: mutation showing yellow ground colour with brown and black pigment, Yellow Lipochrome: mutation creating the loss of brown and black pigment, leaving yellow ground colour[9] etc.)
  • Type canaries (bred for their shape and conformation – Australian plainhead, Berner, Border, Fife, Gibber Italicus, Gloster, Lancashire, Raza Española, Yorkshire, etc.)
  • Song canaries (bred for their unique and specific song patterns – Spanish Timbrado, German Roller (also known as Harz Roller), Waterslager (also known as "Malinois"), American Singer, Russian Singer, Persian Singer).

While wild canaries are a yellowish-green colour, domestic canaries have been selectively bred for a wide variety of colours, such as yellow, orange, brown, black, white, and red (the colour red was introduced to the domestic canary through hybridisation with the red siskin (Spinus cucullatus), a species of South American finch).[10] Evidence of hybridization has also been found between the domestic canary (S. canaria domestica) and the black-chinned siskin (Spinus barbatus) in captivity.[11]

Midway Atoll is home to a colony of feral yellow canaries, descended from pet birds introduced in 1909 by employees of the Commercial Pacific Cable Company.[12] An estimated 500 canaries, which have retained their bright yellow plumage, are resident on Sand Island.[13]

Competitions edit

Canaries are judged in competitions following the annual molt in the summer.[14] This means that in the Northern Hemisphere the show season generally begins in October or November and runs through December or January. Birds can only be shown by the persons who raised them. A show bird must have a unique band on its leg indicating the year of birth, the band number, and the club to which the breeder belongs. [citation needed]

There are many canary shows all over the world. The world show (C.O.M. - Confederation Ornithologique Mondiale) is held in Europe each year and attracts thousands of breeders. As many as 20,000 birds are brought together for this competition.[citation needed]

Miner's canary edit

 
Mining foreman R. Thornburg shows a small cage with a canary used for testing carbon monoxide gas in 1928.
 
Resuscitation cage with an oxygen cylinder serving as a handle used to revive a canary for multiple uses in detecting carbon monoxide pockets within mines

Mice were used as sentinel species for use in detecting carbon monoxide in British coal mining from around 1896,[15] after the idea had been suggested in 1895 by John Scott Haldane.[16] Toxic gases such as carbon monoxide or asphyxiant gases such as methane[17] in the mine would affect small warm-blooded animals before affecting the miners, since their respiratory exchange is more rapid than in humans. A mouse will be affected by carbon monoxide within a few minutes, while a human will have an interval of 20 times as long.[18] Later, canaries were found to be more sensitive and a more effective indicator as they showed more visible signs of distress. Their use in mining is documented from around 1900.[19] The birds were sometimes kept in carriers which had small oxygen bottles attached to revive the birds.[20][21] The use of miners' canaries in British mines was phased out in 1986.[22][23]

The phrase "canary in a coal mine" is frequently used to refer to a person or thing which serves as an early warning of a coming crisis. By analogy, the term "climate canary" is used to refer to a species (called an indicator species) that is affected by an environmental danger prior to other species, thus serving as an early warning system for the other species with regard to the danger.[24]

Use in research edit

Canaries have been extensively used in research to study neurogenesis, or the birth of new neurons in the adult brain, and also for basic research in order to understand how songbirds encode and produce song. Thus, canaries have served as model species for discovering how the vertebrate brain learns, consolidates memories, and recalls coordinated motor movements.

Fernando Nottebohm, a professor at the Rockefeller University in New York City, detailed the avian brain structures and pathways that are involved in the production of bird song.[25][26]

Canaries are sometimes used to avoid hazardous human testing. Wasicky et al 1949 used them in early testing of insect repellents. Human testing could only provide limited sample size and the inherent variance of the host ⇔ repellent ⇔ insect interaction is too high. Canaries, among other test animals, provided larger sample sizes cheaply.[27]

In culture edit

In organized crime, the canary symbolizes an informant who "sings to the police".[28]

Canaries have been depicted in cartoons from the mid-20th century as being harassed by domestic cats; the most famous cartoon canary is Warner Bros.' "Tweety".

Norwich City, an English football team, is nicknamed "the Canaries" due to the city once being a famous centre for breeding and export of the birds. The club adopted the colours of yellow and green in homage. Jacob Mackley, of Norwich, won many prizes with birds of the local variety and shipped about 10,000 from Norwich to New York every year.[29] A number of other sports teams worldwide use variations of the name "Canaries", such as Atlético Morelia (Mexico), Botev Plovdiv (Bulgaria), Frosinone (Italy), Koper (Slovenia), FC Novi Sad (Serbia), Fenerbahçe (Turkey), Lillestrøm SK (Norway), Kedah FA (Malaysia), IAPE (Maranhão, Brazil), the Brazil national football team and the Brazil women's national football team.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Index to Organism Names (ION) February 21, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Encyclopedia of life
  3. ^ ION, Index to Organism Names
  4. ^ The Taxonomicon
  5. ^ Hawley, DM; Grodio, J; Frasca, S; Kirkpatrick, L; Ley, DH (2011). "Experimental infection of domestic canaries (Serinus canaria domestica) with Mycoplasma gallisepticum: a new model system for a wildlife disease". Avian Pathol. 40 (3): 321–7. doi:10.1080/03079457.2011.571660. PMID 21711192. S2CID 205546920.
  6. ^ Eschener, Kat (December 30, 2016). "The Story of the Real Canary in the Coal Mine". Smithsonian. Retrieved June 11, 2018.
  7. ^ "Canary Care". Animal World. Retrieved February 27, 2016.
  8. ^ Pliny the Elder. . Archived from the original on April 29, 2019. Retrieved July 25, 2012.
  9. ^ "Color Canaries: Information and Sound Recordings". Beauty of Birds. September 16, 2021.
  10. ^ Birkhead, Tim (2003). A Brand-New Bird: How Two Amateur Geneticists Create the First Genetically Engineered Animal. New York, NY: Basic Books. ISBN 978-0-465-00665-6.
  11. ^ Diaz, Leila; Correa, Víctor Alejandro; Nuñez, José J. (2018). "Evidencias moleculares de hibridación entre Serinus canaria domestica (L., 1758) y Spinus barbatus (Molina, 1782) (Aves: Fringillidae)" [Molecular evidences of hybridization between Serinus canaria domestica (L., 1758) and S. barbatus (M., 1782) (Aves: Fringillidae)]. Boletín de la Real Sociedad Española de Historia Natural (in Spanish). 112 (1): 29–34. doi:10.29077/bol/112/ce03_diaz. ISSN 2659-2703.
  12. ^ Bryan, William Alanson (1912). "The Introduction and Acclimatization of the Yellow Canary on Midway Island". The Auk. 29 (3): 339–342. doi:10.2307/4071041. ISSN 0004-8038. JSTOR 4071041.
  13. ^ "Domestic Canary". Friends of Midway Atoll. June 4, 2022. Retrieved June 5, 2023.
  14. ^ Hogan, Linda S. (1999). The Complete Canary Handbook: A Collection of Canary Tales. self-published. ASIN B0006RK73W.
  15. ^ Haldane, John Scott (1896). "The Detection and Estimation of Carbonic Oxide in Air". The Journal of Physiology. XX (6): 521–522. doi:10.1113/jphysiol.1896.sp000635. PMC 1512612. PMID 16992351.
  16. ^ Haldane, John Scott (1895). "The Action of Carbonic Oxide on Man". The Journal of Physiology. XVIII (5–6): 448. doi:10.1113/jphysiol.1895.sp000578. PMC 1514663. PMID 16992272.
  17. ^ Biggins, Peter; Kusterbeck, Anne; Hilt, John (2001). Bio-inspired Materials and Sensing Systems. Royal Society of Chemistry. p. 6. ISBN 978-1849731218. Retrieved October 25, 2016.
  18. ^ Haldane, John Scott (1895). "The Action of Carbonic Oxide on Man". The Journal of Physiology. XVIII (5–6): 449. doi:10.1113/jphysiol.1895.sp000578. PMC 1514663. PMID 16992272.
  19. ^ Burton, Catherine (1895). "Risking Life and Wing: Victorian and Edwardian Conceptions of Coal-Mine Canaries". Victorian Review. 40 (2): 143–159. doi:10.1353/vcr.2014.0029. S2CID 163033650. Retrieved July 1, 2020.
  20. ^ Page, Walter Hines; Page, Arthur Wilson (August 1914). "Man And His Machines: Resuscitation Cage For Mine Canaries". The World's Work: A History of Our Time. XXVIII (May to October 1914): 474. Retrieved September 19, 2016.
  21. ^ "The canary resuscitator | Museum of Science and Industry". March 27, 2018.
  22. ^ "1986: Coal mine canaries made redundant". BBC News. December 30, 1986. Retrieved May 1, 2010.
  23. ^ Pollock, C. (2016). "The Canary in the Coal Mine". Journal of Avian Medicine and Surgery. 30 (4): 386–391. doi:10.1647/1082-6742-30.4.386. PMID 28107075.
  24. ^ "'Plutoed' voted US word of year". BBC News. January 8, 2007. Retrieved May 1, 2010.
  25. ^ "Fernando Nottebohm, Ph.D." The Rockefeller University. Retrieved August 11, 2012.
  26. ^ . Neurogenesis. Archived from the original on May 25, 2017. Retrieved August 11, 2012.
  27. ^ Dethier, V. G. (1956). "Repellents". Annual Review of Entomology. 1 (1). Annual Reviews: 181–202. doi:10.1146/annurev.en.01.010156.001145. ISSN 0066-4170.
  28. ^ Fitzgerald, Dennis (2014). Informants, Cooperating Witnesses, and Undercover Investigations: A Practical Guide to Law, Policy, and Procedure, Second Edition. CRC Press. ISBN 9781466554580.
  29. ^ Heaton, Trevor (June 21, 2014). "How Norwich fell in love with canaries". Eastern Daily Press. Retrieved November 5, 2020.

Further reading edit

  • McDonald, Robirda, Brats in Feathers, Keeping Canaries ISBN 0-9730434-4-X
  • Miley-Russell, Marie, The Practical Canary Handbook, A Guide to Breeding and Keeping Canaries. ISBN 1-59113-851-5. Especially useful to American Singer canary owners.
  • Linda Hogan, Canary Tales
  • GB Walker, Colour, Type, and Song Canaries
  • David Alderton, Birds Care, You and your pet bird
  • Author unknown, The Canary Handbook, Canaries, Barrons
  • Tim Hawcroft, Health Care for Birds
  • James Blake, Fife Canaries

External links edit

  • The Canary FAQ
  • The Rockefeller University
  • Canary Sound on YouTube

Domestic canary at Curlie

domestic, canary, this, article, about, variety, bird, wild, bird, that, inhabits, islands, western, europe, atlantic, canary, domestic, canary, often, simply, known, canary, serinus, canaria, forma, domestica, domesticated, form, wild, canary, small, songbird. This article is about the pet variety of the bird For the wild bird that inhabits islands off western Europe see Atlantic canary The domestic canary often simply known as the canary Serinus canaria forma domestica 5 is a domesticated form of the wild canary a small songbird in the finch family originating from the Macaronesian Islands the Azores Madeira and the Canary Islands CanaryDomestic canaryConservation statusDomesticatedScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AvesOrder PasseriformesFamily FringillidaeSubfamily CarduelinaeGenus SerinusSpecies S canariaSubspecies S c domesticaTrinomial nameSerinus canaria domestica Linnaeus 1758 1 2 SynonymsSerinus canarius domesticus 3 Linnaeus 1758 I Geoffroy Saint Hilaire 1861 4 Canaries were first bred in captivity in the 17th century having been brought to Europe by Spanish sailors Monks started breeding them and only sold the males which sing This kept the birds in short supply and drove the price up Eventually Italians obtained hens and were able to breed the birds This made them very popular resulting in many breeds arising and the birds being bred all over Europe The same occurred in England First the birds were only owned by the rich but eventually the local citizens started to breed them and again they became very popular Many breeds arose through selective breeding and they are still very popular today for their voices From the 18th up to the 20th centuries canaries and finches were used in the UK Canada and the US in the coal mining industry to detect carbon monoxide In the UK this practice ceased in 1986 6 Typically the domestic canary is kept as a popular cage and aviary bird Given proper housing and care a canary s lifespan ranges from 10 to 15 years 7 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Varieties 3 Competitions 4 Miner s canary 5 Use in research 6 In culture 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEtymology editThe birds are named after Spain s Canary Islands which derive their name from the Latin Insula Canaria after one of the larger islands Gran Canaria meaning island of dogs due to its vast multitudes of dogs of very large size 8 nbsp A white canary nesting nbsp Feral yellow canary at Midway Atoll nbsp Red factor canary nbsp Sleeping canaryVarieties editDomestic canaries are generally divided into three main groups Colour bred canaries bred for their many colour mutations Ino Eumo Satinette Bronze Ivory Onyx Mosaic Brown red factor Green Wild Type darkest black and brown melanin shade in yellow ground birds Yellow Melanin mutation showing yellow ground colour with brown and black pigment Yellow Lipochrome mutation creating the loss of brown and black pigment leaving yellow ground colour 9 etc Type canaries bred for their shape and conformation Australian plainhead Berner Border Fife Gibber Italicus Gloster Lancashire Raza Espanola Yorkshire etc Song canaries bred for their unique and specific song patterns Spanish Timbrado German Roller also known as Harz Roller Waterslager also known as Malinois American Singer Russian Singer Persian Singer While wild canaries are a yellowish green colour domestic canaries have been selectively bred for a wide variety of colours such as yellow orange brown black white and red the colour red was introduced to the domestic canary through hybridisation with the red siskin Spinus cucullatus a species of South American finch 10 Evidence of hybridization has also been found between the domestic canary S canaria domestica and the black chinned siskin Spinus barbatus in captivity 11 Midway Atoll is home to a colony of feral yellow canaries descended from pet birds introduced in 1909 by employees of the Commercial Pacific Cable Company 12 An estimated 500 canaries which have retained their bright yellow plumage are resident on Sand Island 13 Competitions editCanaries are judged in competitions following the annual molt in the summer 14 This means that in the Northern Hemisphere the show season generally begins in October or November and runs through December or January Birds can only be shown by the persons who raised them A show bird must have a unique band on its leg indicating the year of birth the band number and the club to which the breeder belongs citation needed There are many canary shows all over the world The world show C O M Confederation Ornithologique Mondiale is held in Europe each year and attracts thousands of breeders As many as 20 000 birds are brought together for this competition citation needed Miner s canary edit nbsp Mining foreman R Thornburg shows a small cage with a canary used for testing carbon monoxide gas in 1928 nbsp Resuscitation cage with an oxygen cylinder serving as a handle used to revive a canary for multiple uses in detecting carbon monoxide pockets within minesMice were used as sentinel species for use in detecting carbon monoxide in British coal mining from around 1896 15 after the idea had been suggested in 1895 by John Scott Haldane 16 Toxic gases such as carbon monoxide or asphyxiant gases such as methane 17 in the mine would affect small warm blooded animals before affecting the miners since their respiratory exchange is more rapid than in humans A mouse will be affected by carbon monoxide within a few minutes while a human will have an interval of 20 times as long 18 Later canaries were found to be more sensitive and a more effective indicator as they showed more visible signs of distress Their use in mining is documented from around 1900 19 The birds were sometimes kept in carriers which had small oxygen bottles attached to revive the birds 20 21 The use of miners canaries in British mines was phased out in 1986 22 23 The phrase canary in a coal mine is frequently used to refer to a person or thing which serves as an early warning of a coming crisis By analogy the term climate canary is used to refer to a species called an indicator species that is affected by an environmental danger prior to other species thus serving as an early warning system for the other species with regard to the danger 24 Use in research editCanaries have been extensively used in research to study neurogenesis or the birth of new neurons in the adult brain and also for basic research in order to understand how songbirds encode and produce song Thus canaries have served as model species for discovering how the vertebrate brain learns consolidates memories and recalls coordinated motor movements Fernando Nottebohm a professor at the Rockefeller University in New York City detailed the avian brain structures and pathways that are involved in the production of bird song 25 26 Canaries are sometimes used to avoid hazardous human testing Wasicky et al 1949 used them in early testing of insect repellents Human testing could only provide limited sample size and the inherent variance of the host repellent insect interaction is too high Canaries among other test animals provided larger sample sizes cheaply 27 In culture editIn organized crime the canary symbolizes an informant who sings to the police 28 Canaries have been depicted in cartoons from the mid 20th century as being harassed by domestic cats the most famous cartoon canary is Warner Bros Tweety Norwich City an English football team is nicknamed the Canaries due to the city once being a famous centre for breeding and export of the birds The club adopted the colours of yellow and green in homage Jacob Mackley of Norwich won many prizes with birds of the local variety and shipped about 10 000 from Norwich to New York every year 29 A number of other sports teams worldwide use variations of the name Canaries such as Atletico Morelia Mexico Botev Plovdiv Bulgaria Frosinone Italy Koper Slovenia FC Novi Sad Serbia Fenerbahce Turkey Lillestrom SK Norway Kedah FA Malaysia IAPE Maranhao Brazil the Brazil national football team and the Brazil women s national football team See also editAtlantic canary wild canary Australian plainhead Harz Roller Red factor canary Birdcage John Scott Haldane Warrant canary Sentinel speciesReferences edit Index to Organism Names ION Archived February 21 2014 at the Wayback Machine Encyclopedia of life ION Index to Organism Names The Taxonomicon Hawley DM Grodio J Frasca S Kirkpatrick L Ley DH 2011 Experimental infection of domestic canaries Serinus canaria domestica with Mycoplasma gallisepticum a new model system for a wildlife disease Avian Pathol 40 3 321 7 doi 10 1080 03079457 2011 571660 PMID 21711192 S2CID 205546920 Eschener Kat December 30 2016 The Story of the Real Canary in the Coal Mine Smithsonian Retrieved June 11 2018 Canary Care Animal World Retrieved February 27 2016 Pliny the Elder Natural History Archived from the original on April 29 2019 Retrieved July 25 2012 Color Canaries Information and Sound Recordings Beauty of Birds September 16 2021 Birkhead Tim 2003 A Brand New Bird How Two Amateur Geneticists Create the First Genetically Engineered Animal New York NY Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 00665 6 Diaz Leila Correa Victor Alejandro Nunez Jose J 2018 Evidencias moleculares de hibridacion entre Serinus canaria domestica L 1758 y Spinus barbatus Molina 1782 Aves Fringillidae Molecular evidences of hybridization between Serinus canaria domestica L 1758 and S barbatus M 1782 Aves Fringillidae Boletin de la Real Sociedad Espanola de Historia Natural in Spanish 112 1 29 34 doi 10 29077 bol 112 ce03 diaz ISSN 2659 2703 Bryan William Alanson 1912 The Introduction and Acclimatization of the Yellow Canary on Midway Island The Auk 29 3 339 342 doi 10 2307 4071041 ISSN 0004 8038 JSTOR 4071041 Domestic Canary Friends of Midway Atoll June 4 2022 Retrieved June 5 2023 Hogan Linda S 1999 The Complete Canary Handbook A Collection of Canary Tales self published ASIN B0006RK73W Haldane John Scott 1896 The Detection and Estimation of Carbonic Oxide in Air The Journal of Physiology XX 6 521 522 doi 10 1113 jphysiol 1896 sp000635 PMC 1512612 PMID 16992351 Haldane John Scott 1895 The Action of Carbonic Oxide on Man The Journal of Physiology XVIII 5 6 448 doi 10 1113 jphysiol 1895 sp000578 PMC 1514663 PMID 16992272 Biggins Peter Kusterbeck Anne Hilt John 2001 Bio inspired Materials and Sensing Systems Royal Society of Chemistry p 6 ISBN 978 1849731218 Retrieved October 25 2016 Haldane John Scott 1895 The Action of Carbonic Oxide on Man The Journal of Physiology XVIII 5 6 449 doi 10 1113 jphysiol 1895 sp000578 PMC 1514663 PMID 16992272 Burton Catherine 1895 Risking Life and Wing Victorian and Edwardian Conceptions of Coal Mine Canaries Victorian Review 40 2 143 159 doi 10 1353 vcr 2014 0029 S2CID 163033650 Retrieved July 1 2020 Page Walter Hines Page Arthur Wilson August 1914 Man And His Machines Resuscitation Cage For Mine Canaries The World s Work A History of Our Time XXVIII May to October 1914 474 Retrieved September 19 2016 The canary resuscitator Museum of Science and Industry March 27 2018 1986 Coal mine canaries made redundant BBC News December 30 1986 Retrieved May 1 2010 Pollock C 2016 The Canary in the Coal Mine Journal of Avian Medicine and Surgery 30 4 386 391 doi 10 1647 1082 6742 30 4 386 PMID 28107075 Plutoed voted US word of year BBC News January 8 2007 Retrieved May 1 2010 Fernando Nottebohm Ph D The Rockefeller University Retrieved August 11 2012 Neurogenesis in Birds Neurogenesis Archived from the original on May 25 2017 Retrieved August 11 2012 Dethier V G 1956 Repellents Annual Review of Entomology 1 1 Annual Reviews 181 202 doi 10 1146 annurev en 01 010156 001145 ISSN 0066 4170 Fitzgerald Dennis 2014 Informants Cooperating Witnesses and Undercover Investigations A Practical Guide to Law Policy and Procedure Second Edition CRC Press ISBN 9781466554580 Heaton Trevor June 21 2014 How Norwich fell in love with canaries Eastern Daily Press Retrieved November 5 2020 Further reading editMcDonald Robirda Brats in Feathers Keeping Canaries ISBN 0 9730434 4 X Miley Russell Marie The Practical Canary Handbook A Guide to Breeding and Keeping Canaries ISBN 1 59113 851 5 Especially useful to American Singer canary owners Linda Hogan Canary Tales GB Walker Colour Type and Song Canaries David Alderton Birds Care You and your pet bird Author unknown The Canary Handbook Canaries Barrons Tim Hawcroft Health Care for Birds James Blake Fife CanariesExternal links editThe Canary FAQ The Rockefeller University Canary Sound on YouTube nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to the domestic canary Domestic canary at Curlie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Domestic canary amp oldid 1204385405 Miner 27s canary, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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