What is a bird?
bird (bûrd) n.
- Any of the class Aves of warm-blooded, egg-laying, feathered vertebrates with forelimbs modified to form wings.
- Such an animal hunted as game.
- Such an animal, especially a chicken or turkey, used as food: put the bird in the oven.
- Bird Characteristics
- Two-legged (bipedal) vertebrates (animals with a backbone, includes mammals, amphibians, reptiles, and bony fishes).
- Distinguished from other vertebrates by the presence of feathers, a unique modification of the outer skin.
- Feathers are dead structures that wear easily and must be replaced regularly, but are essential for both temperature regulation and flight.
- All birds have bills.
- Bird bills can vary greatly in form and function from species to species, but they are always toothless and are covered with a horny sheath.
- Bird Evolution
- Birds evolved from reptiles.
- Thomas H. Huxley: Birds are “merely glorified reptiles”.
- Homology- Similarity in one or more body parts in different species; attributable to descent from a common ancestor
- Birds and reptiles both have
- Scales- Look at birds’ feet.
- Yolked, polar eggs
- Nucleated red blood cells. In mammals the red blood cells lack nuclei.
- Occipital condyle- A single ball-and-socket device by which the skull is articulated with the first neck vertebra. Mammals have two of these.
- A single middle ear bone: the stapes. Mammals have three.
- The lower jaws (mandibles) have five or six bones on each side.
- Archaeopteryx lithographica- The Missing Link
- Fossil found in Bavaria in 1861 dated at 135 to 155 mya
- Clearly showed
- Wing bones
- Flight feathers
- Pairs of feathers attached to each vertebra of the tail
- Archaeopteryx was a crow-sized, bipedal “reptile” with a blunt snout and many small, reptilian teeth.
- Feathers on both wings and tail
- A strong-running terrestrial “bird” that could leap into trees, jump among branches and make short flights.
- Capable of gliding, but not long sustained flight.
- Had strong, curved claws, like those of perching birds.
- Could not launch from the ground because it lacked the principal muscles that lift the wing rapidly in the recovery stroke.
- Vanes were asymmetrical, like that of strong fliers.
- Immensely important for the theory of evolution.
- Found only two years after Darwin published Origin of Species (1859)
- Evolution of Feathers
- Derived from scales of some kind
- Not exactly sure what advantage(s) promoted the evolution of feathers
- One scenario
- Slightly elongated and then frayed scales on the trailing edges of the forelimbs possibly enhanced either primitive gliding or parachuting.
- As gliding abilities improved and steering requirements increased, so did the elaboration of feathers on the wings and the tail.
- A second scenario
- Scales became more feather like as temperature regulation devices, particularly as heat shields, that enabled the organism to be more active in hot, sunny environments
- Modern lizards that live in hot, sunny climates tend to have large scales that reduce heat loads.
- Featherlike fraying of a scale’s edges would increase its flexibility and effectiveness as a heat shield during the day and insulation at night
- Reptilian Ancestors of Birds
- No doubt birds evolved from Mesozoic reptiles, but which reptiles?
- Thecodonts or Theropods
- Thecodont Theory
- Thecodonts were lightly built reptiles in the early Mesozoic era that gave rise to pterosaurs and crocodiles. Some (eg. Longisquama) had elongated scales, that seem like a natural precursor to feathers.
- Fourteen shared, derived characters unite birds and crocodilian thecodonts.
- But there is a 90 million year gap between crocodilian thecodonts and Archaeopteryx.
- Protoavis, a fossil found in western Texas, dating 75 million years before Archaeopteryx, may be a link, but its poor condition makes classification very difficult.
- Theropod theory
- Theropod dinosaurs evolved from thecodonts, and lived simultaneously with Archaeopteryx.
- Both share 23 of 42 specialized skeletal features of the hand, vertebrae, humerus and ulna, pectoral arch, hindlimb and pelvis.
- Juvenile dinosaurs and birds both have growth plates with a unique cellular structure in their leg bones.
- Evolution of Avian Flight- The Debate
- Arboreal Theory vs. Cursorial Theory
- Arboreal Theory
- Evolution of flight started with the parachuting and gliding from elevated perches.
- The extensions of the bones of the forelimb enhanced by elongated (flight) feathers enabled the ancestors of Archaeopteryx to parachute and glide between trees.
- The favored theory for many years.
- Cursorial Theory
- Forelimbs first elongated because they heightened leaping ability in a small bipedal theropod dinosaurs that ran and jumped to catch insects in its jaws. Extension of forelimbs would help to control and extend its leaps.
- Elongation of the arms and tail would enhance maneuverability and higher velocities of running and jumping.
- Uses adaptive steps based on trajectory ballistics, rather than the aerodynamics of true flight. Flight would be a logical extension of the first small jumps by this little dinosaur.
- Protowings, increased arboreal habits and gliding would be the next logical steps.
- Bird Adaptations
- Birds are feathered flying machines.
- Skeleton is strengthened and reinforced through fusion of bones of the hands, head, pelvis and feet.
- Uncinate processes overlap other ribs and so strengthen the walls of the thorax.
- The furcula (wishbone) compresses and rebounds like a spring in rhythm to the beat of the wings.
- Wings are modified forelimbs, whose sole (almost) purpose is flight.
- Fused hand bones support and maneuver the flight feathers.
- Arboreal (tree-dwelling) birds have feet that tightly grip branches.
- An enlarged, keeled sternum houses and anchors the large breast muscles that empower wings.
- The pygostyle, made of fused tail vertebrae, supporsta nd controls the tail feathers, which are used for breaking and steering.
- Bird physiology accommodates the extreme metabolic demands of flight and temperature regulation.
- Red fibers of avian flight muscles have an extraordinary capacity for sustained worka nd can also produce heat by shivering.
- Birds maintain high body temps (40 to 44C) over a wide range of ambient temps.
- Circulatory and respiratory systems
- Four-chambered heart and efficient, flow-through lungs, which deliver fuel and remove both waste and heat produced by metabolic activities.
- Reproduction
- Large, richly provisioned external eggs, the most elaborate reproductive cells of any animal.
- Requires dedicated parental care.
- Most birds form monogamous pairs, though many engage in additional sexual liaisons.
- Large well, developed brains 6 to 11 times larger than that of similarly sized reptiles
- Bird brains and primate brains exhibit functional lateralization, with left hemispheric dominance associated with learning and innovation in vocal repertoires.
- Highly developed neural systems and acute senses mediate feats of communication and navigation.
- Birds (esp. song birds) have the greatest sound-producing capabilities of all vertebrates.
- Birds can navigate using patterns of the Earth’s magnetism, celestial cues, and perhaps polarized light.
- Birds can see into the near-ultraviolet and can hear infrasounds-sounds below the range of human hearing.