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KEY CONCEPT Birds have many adaptations for flight.

KEY CONCEPT Birds have many adaptations for flight. Birds evolved from theropod dinosaurs. Birds and many theropods share anatomical features. hollow bones fused collarbones that form V-shaped wishbone rearranged muscles in the hips and legs

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KEY CONCEPT Birds have many adaptations for flight.

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  1. KEY CONCEPT Birds have many adaptations for flight.

  2. Birds evolved from theropod dinosaurs. • Birds and many theropods share anatomical features. • hollow bones • fused collarbones that form V-shaped wishbone • rearranged muscles in the hips and legs • “hands” that have lost their fourth and fifth fingers • feathers

  3. The oldest undisputed fossilized bird is Archaeopteryx.

  4. lung gizzard kidney crop small intestine pectoral muscle large intestine cloaca sternum(keel) liver heart A bird’s body is specialized for flight. • Birds have several unique features that allow them to fly. • wings to produce flight • strong flight muscles to move the wings • active metabolism that provides energy to the muscles • hollow bone structure to minimize weight • gonads active during only part of year

  5. Wings are structures that enable birds to fly. • airfoil shape • covered with feathers

  6. Air sacs help a bird meet its oxygen demand during flight.

  7. Birds have spread to many ecological niches. • The shape of a bird’s wing reflects the way it flies. • short and broad • long and narrow

  8. lung gizzard kidney crop small intestine pectoral muscle large intestine cloaca sternum(keel) liver heart • The shape of a bird’s wing reflects the way it flies. • wide and broad • stout and tapered

  9. Bald eagle green woodpecker blue-footed booby • Differences in the shape of a bird’s beak reflects how it eats. • spearlike • hooked • chisel-shaped

  10. blue-footed booby bald eagle green woodpecker • Birds show great diversity in their foot shape. • webbed • heavy claws • different toe location

  11. Feathers: Anatomy

  12. Feather Types

  13. Flight Feathers

  14. Flight feathers and the Wing • Primaries • Attached to hand • Asymmetrical vanes • Owls have silent flight because of barbs on front of vane • Generate thrust (forward motion) • Secondaries • Attached to ulna • Generate lift • Tail feathers • Function in steering and braking

  15. Wing shapes Great once in the air, but first need to get launched! - Mastery of Flight beginning of video

  16. Feather care • Birds preen up to once an hour! • Some preening glands have lipids which resist keratin eating fungi and bacteria

  17. Adaptations for flight: Anatomical • Feathers • Wing • Reproduction (internal, eggs) • Bones

  18. Anatomical adaptations: Bones (already mentioned) • Lightweight, strutted or hollow • No teeth • Modified forelimb

  19. Anatomical adaptations: Bones • Fused bones of pelvis, feet, hands, head • Uncinate processes on ribs • Furcula (wishbone)

  20. Flight Adaptations: Physiological adaptations • Endothermic • Separate red and white muscle fibers

  21. Flight Adaptations: Red versus White fibers • Red fibers = sustained work, ability to produce heat by shivering • White fibers – powerful stroke but cannot be sustained Pigeon wing and breast? Grouse or turkey wing and breast? Bird leg? Humming bird wing and breast?

  22. Flight Adaptations: Circulatory System • High metabolic demands require rapid circulation of high volumes of blood. • Four chambered heart • Double circulatory system (pulmonary and systemic) • Large heart -50-100% larger and more powerful than mammals of the same size.

  23. Flight Adaptations: Respiratory System • Mammals: simple but inefficient. 20% of air never contacts a respiratory surface for exchange • Birds require 2 full breaths to move air completely through system. More efficient w/ help of air sacs • In addition to lungs, th ey have ~9 air sacks extending into abdomen, land toward wings

  24. Flight Adaptations: Urinary system • How often do you see a bird drink? • Sources: • High metabolism = high metabolic water production(up to 80% of requirements) • Food: particularly birds of prey and insectivores. • Seed eaters need the most water • Free water – streams, watering hole, raindrops, snow

  25. Flight Adaptations: Urinary system • Water conservation • Excrete uric acid – a semi-solid with 2x the nitrogen per molecule. Concentrated in cloaca up to 3000x the acid level as in blood

  26. Flight Adaptations: No teeth…Digestive system impact? • Crop • Proventriculus (stomach) • Ventriculus (Gizzard) • Intestines • Caecae If a nectar eater, is a gizzard important? What size caecae would a goose have? What other feeding adaptations do birds have?

  27. Bird Adaptations: Bill Shape • So important that this is one way birds are classified. Twenty different orders of birds are recognized • Why are there so many different types of birds?

  28. Evolutionary Arms Race • Over evolutionary time, we expect natural selection increases the efficiency with which predators detect/capture prey AND also we expect selection to increase prey ability to avoid detection and to escape! • Who wins?

  29. Evolutionary Arms Race Predator adaptation Prey Counter-Adaptation Crypsis Polymorphism Space out mimicry • Improved visual acuity • Search image • Limit search to abundant areas • learning Winners? No. Life versus dinner principle. Stronger selection on prey. Predators adapting to a variety of prey species and cannot specialize.

  30. Bird Adaptations: Reproductive System • Bird Egg • One functional ovary (less weight) • Nest structure and bird behavior create microclimate for embryo • Laying/incubating eggs is dangerous. Need to avoid predators! • Site choice • Nest structure • Adult behavior

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