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Published byEmery Montgomery Modified over 9 years ago
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Chapter 42 Birds Section 3 Classification
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Diversity Hawks & eagles- powerful beaks & clawed talons that help them capture & eat prey Swifts have tiny beaks that open wide to capture insects in mid-air Swifts spend most of their life in flight and have tiny feet Feet of flightless birds are modified for running and walking
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Order Anseriformes Swans, geese, and ducks- waterfowl Aquatic, webbed-feet for swimming Feed on invertebrates, fish, grass, etc Bill is typically flattened Young are precocial & parental care is provided by female
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Swan
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Canada Geese
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Mallard Ducks
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Order Strigiformes Owls Sharp, curved beak with sharp talons or claws Large, forward-facing eyes Keen eyesight and hearing
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Barn Owls
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Great-horned Owl
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Order Apodiformes Hummingbirds & swifts Hummingbirds eat nectar and have a very long tongue Swifts eat insects in mid-air
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Hummingbird
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Swifts
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Order Psittaciformes Parrots, parakeets, macaws, cockatoos, & cockatiels Live in tropics Eat seeds and fruit Vocal birds
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Parakeet
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Macaw
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Cockatoo
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Cockatiel
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Order Piciformes Tree-dwelling birds- woodpeckers, honey-guides, & toucans Chisel-like bills
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Woodpecker
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Honey-guide
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Toucan
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Order Passeriformes Over 5,900 species Robins, blue jays, and wrens Perching birds Feed on nectar, insects, seeds & fruits Song-birds- males produce song Syrinx- song is produced in this structure
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Robin
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Blue Jay
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Wren
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Order Columbiformes Pigeons & doves Feed on fruits and grain Crop secretes a nutritious milk-like fluid called crop milk
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Pigeon
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Dove
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Order Ciconiiformes Herons, storks, ibises, egrets, raptors (ospreys, hawks, falcons, vultures & eagles), & penguins Long, flexible neck, long legs, long bill Feed on fish, frogs, small prey in shallow water Diurnal species
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Heron
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Stork
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Ibis
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Egret
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Osprey
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Hawk
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Falcon
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Vulture
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Eagle
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Penguin
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Order Galliformes Turkeys, pheasants, chickens, grouse, and quails- fowl Terrestrial birds- limited flying ability Strong gizzard Important part of human diet
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Turkey
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Pheasant
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Chicken
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Grouse
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Quail
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Order Struthioniformes Ostriches, rheas, emus, and cassowaries Ostriches cannot fly and can reach speeds of over 30 mph on land!
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Ostrich
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Rheas
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Emu
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Cassowaries
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REVIEW!!! Explain how a bird’s beak and feet can provide information about the bird’s lifestyle. Identify the function of the syrinx.
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