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STUDY GUIDES: (Click a link to go to the associated questions)
Reproduction and Physiology
Annual Cycles, Migration, and Navigation
Conservation
Migration Connectivity
Winter Habitat and Migration

FOR SPRING 2011 1st Exam:

Introductory Lectures (and readings in Gill)

What is a bird?

What characters are important in phylogenetic analyses?

Which are bad?

Why?

What fields of biology have been furthered by studies of birds?

Why do birds make such good study subjects for so many fields of biology?

In what field of biology have birds proved of little help? Why?

What was the Modern Synthesis? What two fields of biology did it unite? When did it occur?

How many species of birds are there in the world?

*How many have there been?

*Why are these numbers so different?

How many orders of birds are there?

Do we know exactly?

Why not?

What is Biogeography?

What biogeographic region are we in here in NC?

What is biodiversity?

Why is the biodiversity of North Carolina particularly rich?

Ornithologists of note:

Give a 2-sentence bio of:

           Alexander Wilson

           John James Audubon

            Roger Tory Peterson

            Margaret Morse Nice

            Arthur C. Bent

            Robert MacArthur

            Peter and Rosemary Grant

            Ted Parker

           Ernst Mayr

(I may also give some facts about these folks and ask you to match a name to the description.)

The Evolution of Flight

How does flight work:

What are the two forces acting on a bird in flight?

What provides the power to overcome these forces?

Which is more important in providing lift: Bernoulli’s Principle or Newton’s 3rd Law

How does each work?

How does turbulence affect lift?

How is this relevant to the "slotted" wings of soaring birds like vultures?

Albatrosses (Procellariformes) are great soarers, but have long, thin wings without the "slotted" effect—why is this?

How else do birds reduce turbulence?

Why do geese fly in V-shaped formation? (Two reasons)

How is the avian skeleton adapted to flight?

What is the Supracoracoideus?

Where is it located?

What’s unusual about this?

What benefit does its location convey?

What are antagonistic muscles?

What do we mean by "origin" and "insertion" of muscles?

What are the two antagonistic flight muscles in birds?

What is the difference between primary and secondary flight feathers?

What are the main parts of a feather?

When we say asymmetrical wing feathers are associated with flight, what parts are asymmetrical?

Flight is very energetically demanding. What are the benefits of the ability to fly?

What is the ideal wing shape for soaring birds?

While this is good for soaring, what difficulties are associated with the wing shape? (See the "no free lunch question below)

*How do white-muscle and red-muscle fibers differ? 

*How does this relate to different types of flight (short sprint vs. long-distance migrants)?

Why do so many birds evolve flightlessness?

Where does this usually happen?

Why did birds "go wild," in an evolutionary sense, on New Zealand?

Name a bird in New Zealand that now fills a typically mammalian niche.

What is an ecological niche?

Name 3 birds in New Zealand that have evolved to fill ecological niches that birds don’t usually occupy.

The Origin of Birds

Define:

Therapod

Thecodont

Who is the "captain" of the 'birds evolved from Dinosaurs school'?

Who leads the 'Birds evolved before the Theropods school'?

How do the hand of birds and dinosaurs differ?

What does Feduccia think about this?

What does Prum say about it?

What is the temporal issue with Archaeopteryx and the Theropod origin of birds?

How do Feduccia and Prum see this?

Archaeoptery lithographica

Give a one-sentence definition of evolution.

How are geological periods defined?

When did A. lithographica live? (how many years ago and in what geological era and period)

What is the chronological sequence of the three eras (Mesozoic, Paleozoic, and Cenozoic?

What is the chronological sequence of the three periods in the Mesozoic?

What era is considered the "age of dinosaurs"

What era is the "age of mammals"

What about A. lithographica was bird-like?

What was reptilian?

From what group of vertebrates did birds evolve?

How do we know birds and reptiles are related?

Why is evolution like tinkering?

How do new traits evolve?

Why are redundancy and gradualism important in the evolution of new traits?

Why does behavior change before structural adaptations evolve?

How does the expression "there’s no such thing as a free lunch" relate to evolution?

Translate this into English:

"...An animal can never be strictly adapted to its present environment. It is always adapted to a sum of past environments in which its ancestors survived. More strictly still, the sum is a weighted sum, with the weights diminishing as we go back in time."

Give an example of this in humans.

Where and when was Archaeopteryx discovered?

Why was the timing important?

What was special about the rocks it was found in?

Compare cursorial and arboreal scenarios for the origin of flight.

What fossil evidence supports these theories?

Could Archaeopteryx lithographica fly?

Definitions:

Adaptive radiation 
Aftershaft
Altricial
Cladogram 
Crop
Diagnosable 
Diagnostic characters
Ecological niche 
Extant 
Feather vanes 
Functional redundancy 
Furcula 
Galapagos finches 
Gizzard
Granivorous
Halux 
Hawaiian honeycreepers 
heritability 
Holarctic
hybrid zone 
Keeled sternum 
Key adaptation 
Monotypic
Oil gland
Parsimony 
Passeriformes 
Pigeon's milk
Piscivorous
Polyphyletic 
Ratite
Remix (plural remiges) 
Retrix (plural retrices)
Shared derived characters 
Syrinx

 

2011 STUDENTS CAN IGNORE THESE:
For each of the 14 orders below:
What is our current understanding of the taxonomy of the group? Is it monophyletic? Do we know what the closest allies (other orders) are?
Is it species-rich or does it have only a few families/genera/species?
What types of birds are in this order?
Give the common name of two species in the order.
What are the diagnostic characters of the group?

Ratites—Ostriches, emus, rheas
Podicipediformes – Grebes
Gaviiformes—Loons
Procellariiformes—Albatrosses
Ciconiformes—Herons, etc.
Anseriformes—Ducks, geese and swans
Falconiformes—Diurnal birds of prey
Galliformes—Chicken-like birds
Charadriformes—Shorebirds
Columbiformes—Pigeons and doves
Strigiformes—Owls
Apodiformes—Hummingbirds and swifts
Piciformes—Woodpeckers
Passeriformes—Perching birds

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Study Guide: Physiology and Reproduction

Polyandrous
Polygynous
Altricial vs. precocial
Cloaca
Oviparous
Cleidoic egg
Chorion
Allantois
Vitelline Membrane
BMR (basal metabolic rate)
TNZ: Thermo-neutral zone, also upper critical zone, lower critical zone

Explain the heat-loss equation H=(Tb-Ta)/I
What are three things birds can do to manipulate the right side of the equation to reduce heat loss?
What happens when Ta>Tb?
Compare and contrast the counter-current mechanisms associated with the veins in birds' legs and those in their nasal chambers.

What weight reduction adaptations are associated with the gonads in birds?
True or false: Oocytes in female birds develop after hatching.
Where is lutenizing hormone produced?
What does it control
Where are estrogen and testosterone produced?
True or false: The presence of small quantities of testosterone produce secondary sexual characteristics in female birds.
What are secondary characteristics?
True or false: Males are the heterogametic sex in birds.
Describe the sequence of events in egg production
What are carotenoid pigments?
Where are they produced in a birds body?
Why are they important physiologically?
Why do birds lay eggs instead of letting the embryos develop internally?
How long does it take to produce an egg?
What happens to BMR when a female is laying eggs?
Why?
True or false: The yolk in birds with precocial young has several times the energy stores as birds with altricial young.
What are the physiological consequences of having cleidoic eggs?
How do reptile eggs differ from bird eggs?
What's the white stuff in bird droppings?
Why are there pores in bird eggshells?
What is the exquisite compromise associated with these pores?
How did DDT affect reproduction in many species of predatory birds?
What types of birds were most severely affected?
Nares
Syrinx
Air sacs
Pectoralis Major
Supracoracoideus
Rete, or countercurrent mechanism
Give two examples of countercurrent mechanisms in birds.
What is conserved in each?
What are the costs and benefits of the high body temperature of birds?
How do bird lungs differ from mammalian lungs?
What advantage does this confer?
Why is a 4-chambered heart more efficient than a 3-chambered one?
True or false: Most of the oxygenated blood coming from a birds heart goes to the large pectoralis major muscle, rather than the legs.
Why does so much blood go to the legs?
How do birds get water, besides drinking?
Why do birds need salt glands?
Why are they energetically expensive?
Why don't all birds have them?

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Study Guide: Annual Cycles, Migration & Navigation

Definitions:
Circadian rhythm
Circannual rhythm
Photorefractory period
The external coincidence model (see Gill)
Compare navigation to orientation.
Zugunruhe
Hyperphagia

What are the 3 major energetic demands on a bird during its annual cycle?
What is the typical sequence of these events?
What external cues influence their onset?
What evidence shows that these cycles are not perfectly timed to a 24-hr cycle?
Why might natural selection have led to an imprecise circadian rhythm?
Why is timing so important in the annual cycle?
How do birds and mammals differ in the location of the light receptors that are involved in the circadian cycle?
Is the pineal gland the site of light reception in birds?
Is it important?
How do we know this?
Beside light, what other stimuli are important in determining when, and if, the big annual events (molt, migration, and mating) occur?

MIGRATION 2010 Questions (Chapter 10)

Definitions:

Zugunruhe

Orientation

Navigation

Migration

Emlen funnel

Leapfrog migration

Nomadic movement

Hyperphagia

Irruprtions

 

Do birds hibernate?

Where do they go in the winter?

Can we answer this for all species?

How do we know where they go?

What’s the difference between migration and nomadic movement?

Give an example of a species that does each.

How many species of birds migrate?

Migration is really a complex of behaviors. Besides the basic urge to migrate, list 4 separate components of migration.

What’s the main orientation of migration in the New World?

Why?

In Asia and Europe?

Why?

Besides typical latitudinal migration, what other movements do birds make on an annual (or at least periodical) routine?

Do most birds migrate in pairs? Family groups?

What birds migrate in pairs or families?

What about the others, are there differences between ages and sexes in the timing and destinations for migration?

Give examples.

Explain the differences in an evolutionary sense-what are the selective pressures that explain these differences?

Distinguish between ultimate and proximate reasons for migrating.

Compare the costs and benefits of migration.

What evidence is there that migratory behavior is genetically determined?

What is the destination and main migratory pathway for east-coast Ospreys?

How does this differ from Ospreys from the Pacific northwest?

What is the main fuel for migratory birds? What advantages does this have over carbohydrates?

Where is it deposited in a bird’s body?

Spell Lake Chargoggagoggmanchauggauggagoggchaubungungamaugg (Just kidding!)

Do birds undergo other physiological changes in preparation for migration besides laying down fat? Give an example.

Why are migratory stopover areas important for conservation?

What types of habitat are important stopover sites for Neotropical migrants?

For Chardriformes?

What types of birds migrate at night? In the daytime? Why?

What can we learn about migration from weather radar?

Explain migratory connectivity.

Why is this important for conservation?

Besides bird bands, how can we demonstrate this connectivity?

Why can’t we just rely on bird-band returns to study this connectivity?

Why do male birds want to get back to their breeding territories in the spring?

What are the risks?

What are “Neotropical migrants”?

What arguments can be made for their actually being tropical birds that migrate north to take advantage of seasonally abundant resources?

What are these resources?

Why are they suddenly available in the spring?

What other advantages, besides rich food supplies, would tropical birds find in heading north to breed?

If you want to see a lot of spring migrants, do you go out after a high-pressure system has just passed, or after a low-pressure system has moved through? Why?

 

Why haven’t tropical forest birds from Africa evolved this behavior to migrate north to breed in Europe and western Asia?

Some birds species have recently colonized North America. Where do they migrate?

What is molt migration?

Why go north to molt?

How could changes in migratory behavior lead to insipient speciation?

How did Berthold demonstrate that the new migration route for Blackcaps from Germany to the U.K. is a genetic mutation?

How does feather color relate to physical condition in American Redstarts and their annual cycle?



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Study Guide: Conservation

Define:
Metapopulation
Population source/population sink
Biodiversity
Flagship species
Population bottleneck
Habitat corridor
Habitat fragmentation
Neotropical migrant
Shade-grown coffee
xenobiotics

Who was Aldo Leopold?
What perspective did he bring to biological conservation?
Why are we concerned about the loss of rainforests, given that they only represent 7% of the planets land mass and are NOT a net source of oxygen?
What 15gm bird is holding up residential development around Los Angeles? Why?
What is the Safe Harbor program?
What species would be more affected by pesticides, a Red-tailed Hawk or a Bald Eagle? Why?
Name two endangered bird species that nest in the old-growth forests of the Pacific northwest.
What is habitat fragmentation?
Why is it bad for ecosystems? Give at least 2 reasons.
How does hybridization prove problematic in avian conservation?
Give an example.
When would intervention be ethically appropriate?

Why are conservation biologists so concerned about population size?
How do the 25 pairs of Red-tailed Hawks on the Socorro Islands off Mexico's coast survive if small population sizes are so all-fired important?
List 5 characteristics that are associated with species of special conservation concern.
Does a large population guarantee that a species wont go extinct? Cite 2 examples.
Why did only 4 species out of 160 breeding in the forests of eastern North America go extinct when the forests were almost completely cleared in the last 2 centuries?
What are the major, human-induced sources of bird mortality?
What can be done to reduce their negative affects on bird populations?
List 4 species of birds that have gone extinct in North America in the last 200 years.
What species have shown significant increases as a result of conservation efforts?
Why has the Thick-billed Parrot been so difficult to reintroduce?
What social conditions are necessary for successful conservation of our natural resources?

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Migration Connectivity

In the map on the left, you can see that the birds from the southern Great Lakes subpopulation all migrate to Central America, while the map on the right shows birds from this same population going to the Caribbean and Central America--so there is connectivity in the map on the left, but not in the map on the right.

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Habitat quality and migration in American Redstarts:

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