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The Origins of Birds, Feathers, and Flight Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Birds Class Aves:...

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The Origins of Birds, Feathers, and Flight Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Birds Class Aves : ~9700 extant species; exhibit feathers and wings; keratinized beaks lacking teeth; air sacs aid respiration; hard- shelled eggs Shared Features with Reptiles : single occipital condyle , single middle- ear bone, multiple lower jaw bones, uric acid excretion, amniotic egg, scales on feet; recognized as “glorified reptiles” by Thomas Henry Huxley in mid-1800s Shared Features with Dromeosaurs (therapods) : mobile S-shaped neck, three- toed foot, wishbone (fused clavicles), lunate wrist, hollow bones Evolution of feathers, keeled sternum, and loss of teeth evident in transitional fossils from Jurassic: Archaeopteryx (discovered 1861, ten specimens as of 2007), Caudipteryx, Protarchaeopteryx, Sinosauropteryx, and others The Origin and Development of Feathers Feathers homologous to scales; shaft develops from epidermal outgrowth that rolls into cylinder, splits open; barbs harden as keratinized The Evolution of Flight in Birds (two competing hypotheses) Arboreal (“Trees Down”) Hypothesis : flight evolved gradually from gliding (similar to kakapo in New Zealand); Archaeopteryx likely was a glider, but note that ancestral dromeosaurs were likely ground-dwelling Cursorial (“Ground Up”) Hypothesis : feathers and wings evolved for non-flight related functions (ex., assistance for incline running, sexual selection, thermoregulation), and then were co-opted for
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Page 1: The Origins of Birds, Feathers, and Flight Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Birds Class Aves: ~9700 extant species; exhibit feathers and wings; keratinized.

The Origins of Birds, Feathers, and Flight

Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Birds Class Aves: ~9700 extant species; exhibit feathers and wings;

keratinized beaks lacking teeth; air sacs aid respiration; hard-shelled eggs Shared Features with Reptiles: single occipital condyle, single middle-ear

bone, multiple lower jaw bones, uric acid excretion, amniotic egg, scales on feet; recognized as “glorified reptiles” by Thomas Henry Huxley in mid-1800s

Shared Features with Dromeosaurs (therapods): mobile S-shaped neck, three- toed foot, wishbone (fused clavicles), lunate wrist, hollow bones Evolution of feathers, keeled sternum, and loss of teeth evident in transitional

fossils from Jurassic: Archaeopteryx (discovered 1861, ten specimens as of 2007), Caudipteryx, Protarchaeopteryx, Sinosauropteryx, and others

The Origin and Development of Feathers Feathers homologous to scales; shaft develops from epidermal outgrowth

that rolls into cylinder, splits open; barbs harden as keratinizedThe Evolution of Flight in Birds (two competing hypotheses)

Arboreal (“Trees Down”) Hypothesis: flight evolved gradually from gliding (similar to kakapo in New Zealand); Archaeopteryx likely

was a glider, but note that ancestral dromeosaurs were likely ground-dwelling

Cursorial (“Ground Up”) Hypothesis: feathers and wings evolved for non-flight related functions (ex., assistance for incline running, sexual selection, thermoregulation), and then were co-opted for flight; note that no gliders today launch from the ground

Page 2: The Origins of Birds, Feathers, and Flight Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Birds Class Aves: ~9700 extant species; exhibit feathers and wings; keratinized.

Fig. 27.1

Page 3: The Origins of Birds, Feathers, and Flight Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Birds Class Aves: ~9700 extant species; exhibit feathers and wings; keratinized.

Fig. 27.3

Page 4: The Origins of Birds, Feathers, and Flight Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Birds Class Aves: ~9700 extant species; exhibit feathers and wings; keratinized.

Fig. 27.5

Page 5: The Origins of Birds, Feathers, and Flight Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Birds Class Aves: ~9700 extant species; exhibit feathers and wings; keratinized.

Diversity of Modern Birds, Wings, and FlightDiversity of Extant Birds: Terrestrial Flightless Birds (ostrich, emus, rheas, kiwis; all

derived from flying ancestors; many evolved on islands without predators); Swans, Geese, Ducks (broad bills); Loons, and Grebes (many diving forms); Galliformes: quail, grouse, pheasants, turkeys, peacocks, domestic fowl (ground nesting); Flamingos (bill strains zooplankton); Herons, and Storks (long neck and legs, waders); Raptors (diurnal birds of prey, incl. falcons, hawks, eagles, condors, and buzzards); Pigeons and Doves (short neck and legs); Parrots and Parakeets (hinged upper beak, tropical); Owls (nocturnal predators); Swifts and Hummingbirds (latter eat nectar); Woodpeckers and Toucans (nest in tree cavities); Seabirds and Shorebirds: include albatrosses, terns (long migrations), shearwaters (fly into water), gulls, sandpipers, pelicans (expandable throat), puffins, penguins (emperor penguin largest); Perching Songbirds: include 56 families (~60% of all bird species); warblers, mockingbirds, jays, ravens, and many more

Flapping Flight and Wing Morphologies Flapping Flight: thrust and stall control from distal end (wingtips); lift from medial wing

(2° feathers of forearm); alula (thumb feathers) & wing slots prevent stalling

Wing Morphologies Elliptical Wings: low aspect ratio (length to width); allows maneuverability; wings slotted between

the primary feathers (with alula, prevent stalling during sharp turns) High Aspect Ratio Wings: good for high-speed flight; found in birds that feed in air and migrators Dynamic Soaring Wings: mainly in oceanic birds (ex. albatross) High Lift Wings: slots and alula provide high lift at low speeds; found in raptors, owls (land soarers)

Page 6: The Origins of Birds, Feathers, and Flight Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Birds Class Aves: ~9700 extant species; exhibit feathers and wings; keratinized.

Fig. 27.2

Page 7: The Origins of Birds, Feathers, and Flight Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Birds Class Aves: ~9700 extant species; exhibit feathers and wings; keratinized.

Fig. 27.16

Page 8: The Origins of Birds, Feathers, and Flight Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Birds Class Aves: ~9700 extant species; exhibit feathers and wings; keratinized.

Fig. 27.17 and Fig. 27.18

Page 9: The Origins of Birds, Feathers, and Flight Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Birds Class Aves: ~9700 extant species; exhibit feathers and wings; keratinized.

Fig. 27.19

Page 10: The Origins of Birds, Feathers, and Flight Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Birds Class Aves: ~9700 extant species; exhibit feathers and wings; keratinized.

Modern Birds – Form and Function Feathers: include contour feathers (incl. flight feathers) and down feathers; molting

occurs periodically; colors due to melanin, lipochromes, and light scattering Skeleton: light-weight, pneumatized bones (ex. frigatebird with 7-foot wingspan has

four ounce skeleton); heavy leg bones balance body; kinetic (modified diapsid) skull; fused clavicles (furcula, or wishbone); rigid backbone (fused vertebrae, incl. caudal pygostyle); some forelimb bones fused in wing; keeled sternum; sharp talons in raptors (hawks, falcons, eagles); keratinized jaws beak

Muscular System: massive flight muscles include pectoralis and supracoracoidus (latter raises wing via pulley arrangement), both anchored to sternum; feet with tough tendons, incl. toe-locking mechanism (grip, perching); complex muscle groups in neck and tail (operate tail feathers)

Feeding and Digestion: flight allowed capture of insects in air; most are generalists, with many nectar specialists; high metabolisms force high food consumption; two stomach chambers, incl. gizzard for grinding food; some with crop (storage); beaks specialized for feeding mode (sea- birds and shorebirds include plunge diving, probing, skimming, spearing, and sweeping)

Circulation and Respiration: four-chambered heart; faster heart rate than mammals; nucleated red- blood cells; continuous, one-way airflow through parabronchi of lungs (vs. terminal alveoli); air sacs, with tubes extending into bones; lungs provide buoyancy and cool body during exertion

Excretory System: kidneys excrete uric acid; marine birds often with salt glands Nervous and Sensory Systems: cerebrum with small cortex but large dorsal ventricular

ridge (integrates flying, singing, courtship); large optic lobes and cerebellum; middle ear with single rod-like bone (columella); eye with distinctive internal pecten (provides nutrients and oxygen); raptors with ~100x more cones in fovea than mammals excellent vision

Page 11: The Origins of Birds, Feathers, and Flight Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Birds Class Aves: ~9700 extant species; exhibit feathers and wings; keratinized.

Fig. 27.5

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Fig. 27.7 and

Fig. 27.8

Page 13: The Origins of Birds, Feathers, and Flight Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Birds Class Aves: ~9700 extant species; exhibit feathers and wings; keratinized.

Fig. 27.9

Page 14: The Origins of Birds, Feathers, and Flight Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Birds Class Aves: ~9700 extant species; exhibit feathers and wings; keratinized.

Fig. 27.10

Page 15: The Origins of Birds, Feathers, and Flight Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Birds Class Aves: ~9700 extant species; exhibit feathers and wings; keratinized.

Fig. 27.11

Page 16: The Origins of Birds, Feathers, and Flight Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Birds Class Aves: ~9700 extant species; exhibit feathers and wings; keratinized.

Fig. 27.23

Page 17: The Origins of Birds, Feathers, and Flight Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Birds Class Aves: ~9700 extant species; exhibit feathers and wings; keratinized.

Fig. 27.12

Page 18: The Origins of Birds, Feathers, and Flight Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Birds Class Aves: ~9700 extant species; exhibit feathers and wings; keratinized.

Fig. 27.13

Page 19: The Origins of Birds, Feathers, and Flight Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Birds Class Aves: ~9700 extant species; exhibit feathers and wings; keratinized.

Fig. 27.14

Page 20: The Origins of Birds, Feathers, and Flight Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Birds Class Aves: ~9700 extant species; exhibit feathers and wings; keratinized.

Modern Birds – Behavioral Ecology and Populations

Courtship, Mating, and Nesting Courtship commonly involves colorful plumage (especially males) and dances

(ritualized preening movements); male bowerbirds build and decorate bowers; males sing (or call) innately but improve song with experience

Mating: most species monogamous (but note leks of grouse) Nesting: nests often hidden or inaccessible; most brood eggs and gather food for

chicks (parents regurgitate food); altricial vs. precocial hatchlings

Flocking and Migrations Flocking: similar to fish schooling; anti-predation mechanism (ex. starlings);

most birds are solitary except for during the breeding season Migrations: typically to and from breeding/feeding grounds; triggered by the

lengthening days of late winter and early spring Migratory routes often fixed, range from narrow to wide; longest migration from pole to

pole (Arctic tern); navigation based on landmarks, celestial cues, and Earth’s magnetic field

Populations and Extinctions Introduced starlings and sparrows have out-competed native species in North

America; extinction of ~80 species since 1681, incl. dodo and passenger pigeon (both hunted to extinction); songbirds in decline (domestic and feral cats kill millions a year); DDT led to failed reproduction of pelicans and bald eagles; tropical deforestation major threat for migratory and tropical birds; pollution, nets, and longlines major threats for seabirds

Page 21: The Origins of Birds, Feathers, and Flight Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Birds Class Aves: ~9700 extant species; exhibit feathers and wings; keratinized.

Fig. 27.22 and Fig. 27.24

Page 22: The Origins of Birds, Feathers, and Flight Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Birds Class Aves: ~9700 extant species; exhibit feathers and wings; keratinized.

Fig. 27.26

Page 23: The Origins of Birds, Feathers, and Flight Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Birds Class Aves: ~9700 extant species; exhibit feathers and wings; keratinized.

Fig. 27.25

Page 24: The Origins of Birds, Feathers, and Flight Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Birds Class Aves: ~9700 extant species; exhibit feathers and wings; keratinized.

Fig. 27.27

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Fig. 27.28

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Fig. 27.20

Page 27: The Origins of Birds, Feathers, and Flight Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Birds Class Aves: ~9700 extant species; exhibit feathers and wings; keratinized.

Fig. 27.21

Page 28: The Origins of Birds, Feathers, and Flight Feathered Dinosaurs and the Origin of Birds Class Aves: ~9700 extant species; exhibit feathers and wings; keratinized.

Fig. 27.29


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