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I.       Adaptations for flight:

A.                severe constraints imposed by the physics of flight means that flighted birds are all very similar (makes systematics diff.)

B.                 Weight vs. Energy - principal adaptations reduce weight and increase efficiency (explains lack of herbivorous birds) weight loss:

1.                Pneumaticized  bones and feathers (Frigatebird’s feathers probably weigh more than the whole bird)

                                      and airsacs

                            Loss of bones and fusion

                                        skull

                                                   bones fused and lost (jaws)

                                                   trade teeth for horny sheath of bill

                                        limbs

                                        vertebrae - pygostyle

                            Reproductive tract

                                        females have only 1 ovary

                                        males - testes reduced in non-breeding season (4 - 500 xs)

                            move principal wing elevators below center of grav.

                          strength

                            fusion throughout skeleton

                                        Synsachrum

                                        hand - loss of digits and fusion

                                                  2 rather than 10 wrist bones

                                                  3 rather than 5 digits

                                        leg - tibiotarsus/tarsometatarsus

                            uncinate processes - reinforce ribcage against stress from flight muscles

                            furcula - spring-like action of unknown function, may act as bellows to move air through air sacs?

                          fuel efficiency

                            four-chambered heart

                            flow-through lungs

                            “dark meat” - capable of extreme aerobic metabolism

                                       narrow cells - high surface to volume ratio for O2 absorption

                                       lots of myoglobin & mitochondria

                                       fat and enzymes for aerobic metabolism

                           “white meat”

                                       capable of a few very powerful contractions

                                       little myoglobin

                                       anaerobic metabolism

                                       different enzymes

                                       tire as lactic acid accumulates

II.       Evolution of feathers:

              what is a feather?

                          Dead Keratin in a protein matrix

                           keratin an inert fibrous substance

                           found in claws, nails, etc. (but different chemistry)

              where did they come from?  Reptilian scales (but chemistry is different)

              why did they appear?  what benefit did they convey?

                          Thermoregulation?

                            keep heat in

                                        were dinosaurs warm-blooded?

                                                   Bakker says yes

                                                   Feduccia says no way

                            keep heat out

                                        modern examples

 

             Other functions

                         aerodynamics

                         insulation

                         communication & camouflage

                         sound production

                         hearing

                         protection

                         water repellency

                         water transport

                         tactile sensation

                         protection (cassoaries have “brush pants”)

                         support

 

             originally living,

                            blood feathers

                            grow from follicles

                            “hunger” bars

                          Shaft

                            Calamus - quill

                            rachis

                          Vanes

                            Barbs

                                        ramus

                                        barbules (=velcro)

                                        barbicel

                           downy portion (lacks barbicels)

                         aftershaft

             Primaries usually 10 remix/remiges

                         rarely much modified - aerodynamics too important

             secondaries

                         6 hummers - 40 albatrosses

                         come off ulna

                         sometimes modified - see text p. 71 Standard-winged Nightjar

             tail - retrix/retrices

                         off pygostyle

                         usually 12, but can be 24 (snipe - some for sound)

             down feathers

                         insulation

                         usually no rachis and no barbicels

             filoplumes - sensory

             Bristles

                         protection

                         also sensory

             Feather tracts

                         thousands of feathers  

                           swan 25,000 - feathers, 20000 on head and neck

                           songbirds 2-3000 feathers, 30-40% on head and neck

                         can weigh 2-3 times the skeleton

                           Bald Eagle - feathers 17% of mass, skeleton 7%

                         most birds have  tracts, some don’t (ostriches)

                           feather tracts pterylae

                           non-feathered tracts apteria

                          8 major pterylae seperated by apteria

                            not fully understood

                                       facilitate muscular control?

                                       facilitate limb movements?

              Feather care

                          Oil or preen gland

                            oil of waxes, fatty acids, fat & water

                            clean feathers

                            maintain moisture and flexibility

                            unique in passerines

                          preening

                            rearrange

                            de-louse

                            scratch head

              Molt and plumages

                          natal down

                          replaced by pennaceous feathers in juvenal plumage

                          body molt into immature or adult plumage

              Feathers dead -

                         no blood, muscles or nerves

                         can change only by abrasion or fading, or molt

                           starlings lose spots

                           meadowlarks expose bright yellow and black ventral feathers

                         growth of new feathers

                           epidermal and dermal cells at base of feather follicle

                            rapid growth - 7mm/day in raptors ca. 1”/3 days

                            pushes old feather out

                            growing feather keratinized at tip first, breaks out of sheath

                           pulp of feather reabsorbed by follicle

                          feather held in follicle by muscle and friction

                           fright molt

                           replace pulled feathers

                           normal molt.

              Molts and plumage

                         why molt? - feathers wear out - structural and fade

                         natal down

                           varies with families

                           some spp. have much, others little

                           some have more than one coat - sometimes from different follicles

                           juvenal plumage replaces down

                            young is now a juvenile

                            juvenal plumage replaced by immature or adult in next molt

                                       flight feathers not always replaced

                                       molt sequences

                                                   plumages

                                                     juvenal

                                                     basic - non breeding

                                                     alternate - breeding

                                                   molts - pre-each

                                                feathers replaced in sequence within a feather tract - we don’t know how?  differential sensitivity to hormones?