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Chapter 35 - Birds
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Characteristics
of Birds
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Classification
Kingdom Animalia
---Phylum Chordata
------Subphylum Vertebrata
---------Class Aves

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Feathers
Types of feathers
Down feathers - provide
insulation
Contour feathers - cover head and body, provide coloration
Flight feathers - on wings and tail, provide lift
Feathers are covered in oil
to keep them water proof - "like water off a duck's back"
- this oil is secreted froma preen gland
Preening is a behavior that
replaces the oil on feathers, and repairs broken links on the vanes
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Avian
respiration and circulation
A four chambered heart
prevents oxygen rich blood from mixing with oxygen poor blood
- it is a double-loop
Lungs are connected
to air-sacs, which fill with air during inhalation. The
air then is released from the air sacs when the bird exhales -
this means that the bird receives oxygen during inhalation and
exhalation
The lungs are connected
to the trachea.
Bird
Digestion
Birds digest food quickly,
they can't afford the extra weight.
They have no teeth, the breakdown of food occurs in the gizzard
- sometimes birds swallow rocks to assist this
The crop stores food...mother birds regurgitate food stored
in the crop to their babies
Waste exits through the cloaca - and so do eggs
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Bird
Brain

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* Birds have
an excellent sense of sight, but most do not have a good sense of
smell
*Many birds
are intelligent and can solve complex puzzles
*Birds can
learn to talk, but really they are just mimicking sounds they hear
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Beaks
and Feet
Adapted to the birds
way of life. Study of the beak and the feet of a bird gives information
about its lifestyle
Beaks
Short and thick
- seed cracking (robin)
Long and thin, slightly curved - eating nectar (hummingbird)
Strong, chisel like - drilling (woodpecker)
Sharp, curved and pointed - tearing flesh (hawk)
Long and flattened - straining algae and plants (ducks)
Spear shaped - spearing fish (heron)
Feet
3 toes in front,
1 behind - perching (robin)
2 toes in front, 2 behind - climbing (parrot)
Powerful curved talons - grasping prey (hawk)
Webbed - swimming (duck)
Long and thin - wading (heron)
Thick and stout - running (ostrich)
Birds
are classified by the beaks and their feet. There are many bird
orders, but here are some of the more common orders.
Order Passeriformes
- songbirds (bluebirds, robins, sparrow)
Order Falconiformes - birds of prey (hawk, falcon, eagle)
Order Anseriformes - swimming birds (duck, goose, swan)
Order Galliformes - fowl (pheasant, turkey)
Order Ciconiformes - wading birds (heron, flamingo)
*You will not need
to know the orders, but you should know how the birds are grouped.
For example, a hawk is more closely related to a falcon than it
is to a bluebird.
Courtship
Behavior and Reproduction
Birds often engage
in elaborate courtship behavior for mating purposes. These include:
Building nests
Dancing and posturing
Bringing gifts
Bright colorful displays
Singing
Some birds mate for
life, and often both parents raise young.
Two types of reproduction
occur in birds:
Some birds incubate
eggs for a long time - chicks are born with feathers and can
walk/swim (ducks)
Some birds incubate eggs a short time - chicks are born featherless
and helpless (robins)
Myths
about Birds
Birds do not normally
have a good sense of smell, except in carrion eaters (vultures)
- a baby bird that falls out of a nest can be put back in, the
mother probably won't know the difference
Bird poop you find
on your car is actually a mixture of urine and solid waste - birds
cannot store waste
Some birds can learn
to mimic speech, like a parrot - but they can't actually communicate
Eggs bought at the
supermarket are not fertilized, you cannot incubate them to hatch
a chick.
The term "birdbrain"
often describes someone who is stupid - in actuality, some birds
are extremely intelligent and can be trained to do tricks and
can solve puzzles.
The term "eats
like a bird" describes someone who doesn't eat much - in
actuality, birds consume a large amount of food to maintain a
high metabolism (endothermic)
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See if you can figure
out what kind of lifestyle each of the birds below have. Click on
picture for the answer.
Illinois
Birds
See photos
of birds you might see in your backyard.
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Some
special terms to describe birds in groups.
A murder of crows
A gaggle of geese
A herd of swans
A cast of hawks
A brood of chickens
A murmuration of starlings
A watch of nightingales
A host of sparrows
A bevy of quails
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