birds 2 Flashcards

1
Q

What advantages did the ability to fly give birds

A

1) predator escape
2) efficient foraging
3) fast locomotion (cost efficient)
4) allowed colonisation of remote habitats (islands)
5) allowed migrations instead of hibernations

  • made birds successful and the most diverse group of terrestrial vertebrates
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2
Q

What are the constraints of flight in birds

A

1) requires major physiological + anatomical adaptations
2) compared to other vertebrates birds rather uniform in morphology
3) limited size + weight range , aerodynamics predict 12kg
4) Muscle power needed to take off increases by factor of 2.25 for each doubling of biomass

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3
Q

What are the origins of avian flight

A

1) Cursorial - running (stabilisation and/or catching flying prey )
2) Arboreal - from the trees down
3) WAIR - wing assisted incline running (could be earlier incarnation of arboreal hypothesis or combination of cursorial + arboreal)
4) Pouncing pro-avis hypothesis - using raptorial hindlegs in leaping ambush attack, -> selection for greater swooping range (alternative to cursorial)

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4
Q

Arguments for cursorial hypothesis

A

1) ambiguous morphological evidence of climbing abilities
2) lack of trees in locations where archaeopteryx was found
3) spread of feathered forelimbs was originally for stabilisation during running ( probably)
4) Archaeopteryx could probably glide, unlikely it could “flap”

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5
Q

Problems with the cursorial origin of fight

A

1) Max running speed 2 m/s, estimated min flying speed 6 m/s (velocity gap)
2) high energy demands of evolving flight (flight against gravity)

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6
Q

Evidence for arboreal evolution of flight

A

1) Hoatzin - “reptile bird” chicks have claws on two of their wing digits (enable chicks to climb trees until wings strong enough )
2) Feduclias’s claws are analysis - concluded that archaeopteryx was an arboreal. climbing bird that glided from heights

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7
Q

origin of feathers

A

1) feather first appeared in theropods (not birds) and probably did not evolve primarily for flying (symmetrical feather not aerodynamic)
2) Feathers are (probably) homologous of reptilian scales + different structures to hairs
3) Have non-flight functions : thermoregulation, colouration ,waterproof dressing
4) made of keratin (>90%) , (1%) lipid, (8%) water

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8
Q

Types of feather in extant birds

A

1) semiplume
2) down
3) filoplume
4) bristle
5) rectrices (tail feather)
6) remiges (wing feather)

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9
Q

What are the physical principles of flight

A

1) wings function as both aerofoil (lifting surface) and forward motion
2) shape, area + position can be modified
3) wings follow the principle of a cambereal airfoil

  • bottom surface of wing pushes air forward and down, creating an area of high pressure below the wing and low pressure above it.
    4) angle of attack = lift up to 15 degrees
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10
Q

aspect ratio

A

Aspect ratio (aeronautics) In aeronautics, the aspect ratio of a wing is the ratio of its span to its mean chord. Thus, a long, narrow wing has a high aspect ratio, whereas a short, wide wing has a low aspect ratio.

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11
Q

Wing functional types ( aspect ratio)

A

a) Dynamic soaring : high aspect ratio , make use of vertical wind gradient
b) Elliptral - low aspect ratio , highly cambered + high manouverability

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12
Q

cambered

A

camber is the asymmetry between the top and the bottom surfaces of an aerofoil. An aerofoil that is not cambered is called a symmetrical aerofoil.

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13
Q

How does “flapping” flight work

A

1 ) wing tips (primary feathers) responsible for thrust

  • forward momentum from downward stroke of wings
  • wings inclined from horizontal plane
    2) small birds, upstroke = deceleration
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14
Q

How does ventilation work in birds

A
  • birds have unidirectional air flow to receive a higher concentration of oxygen in their lungs than mammals
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15
Q

How do birds use colour + patterns

A

1) V important in sexual selection + crypsis

2)

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16
Q

crypsis

A

crypsis is the ability of an animal to avoid observation or detection by other animals. It may be a predation strategy or an antipredator adaptation

17
Q

how do birds achieve crypsis

A

combinations of pigment and structural characteristics

e.g. (Eu)melanins : black-grey

carotenoids (from diet) : red-yellow

porphyrins: v v sensitive