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Class: Aves Marine Birds
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Characteristics Depend on the ocean for survival Lightweight bones
Return to land to breed. Endothermic = create their own body heat 3 Types of feathers: 1- Down = small, fluffy, closest to skin, for warmth. 2- Contour = larger, cover wings and body, for flight. 3- Powder = Repel water, protect the down
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Online Bird Guide
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Bird Orders Class Aves broken into 29 orders
All orders end in –iformes Ex. Pelecaniformes- Pelicans (totipalmate swimmers) Ex. Passeriformes- Songbirds
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Diving Pelagic Birds Open-ocean birds, spend most of their lives at sea Puffins, petrels, shearwaters, albatross Migrate thousands of km each year
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Large nostrils located in short tubes on sides/top of bill
Spend most of life at sea Come to land only to breed Wandering Albatross-Largest wingspan of all living birds (nearly 12 feet)
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Wandering Albatross
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Wandering Albatross chick
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Shearwater
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Penguins Can dive down 800 meters for food
Flightless, marine, pelagic, swimming and diving birds The Emperor Penguin is the 4ft, 75lb
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Penguins The most aquatic of all marine birds
15 species (all are in the Southern Hemisphere) No contour feather (can’t fly) Thick layer of fat and dense down feathers Excellent swimmers/divers Eyes adapted for underwater vision Both males and females take care of watching the egg and chicks
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Babies Adelie Penguins Emperor Penguins
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Rockhopper Penguin King Penguins
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Penguin
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Totipalmate Swimmers All 4 toes are webbed
Pelicans, Gannets, Cormorants& Frigatebirds Some breathe through their mouth (nasal openings are closed)
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American White Pelican
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Blue-footed Booby
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Long-legged Waders Herons, Egrets, Ibises, Spoonbills, Storks & Vultures Herons & Egrets have S shaped neck in flight
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Herons & Egrets have S shaped neck in flight
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Storks hold neck extended in flight
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Bird populations decreased because of plume hunters (1902-1903)
Fashionable for women to wear feathers in their hats 4 birds=1 ounce ($32/oz)
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1,608 packages of plumes in a commercial sales room in 1902
Each package weighed 30 oz totaling 48,240 oz Required the lives of 192,960 herons
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Flamingos Pink plumage due to carotenoids obtained from food, cyanobacteria Most unusual feature is the bent bill held upside down to feed
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At one time occurred naturally in the state of Florida
Nest made on a cone shaped pedestal of mud Young swim day of hatching
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Flamingo
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Marsh birds Crane, Coots & Moorhens
Losing more species of birds than any major order of birds The Whooping Crane is the tallest American bird
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Whooping Crane & chick
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Sandhill Crane -More commonly seen
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Roseate Spoonbill
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Shorebirds Much diversity Divers, skimmers, waders
Lakes, coastal waters, beaches, meadows
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Shorebirds Sandpiper – narrow, pointed bill
Snowy egret – long, flexible neck Roseate Spoonbill Sea ducks Sea Gull - scavengers
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American Avocet
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Diurnal Birds of Prey Hawks, Eagles, Kites & Ospreys
Have short, decurved hooked beaks Excellent eyesight Feed on birds, mammals, fish or reptiles
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Osprey
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Kingfishers Large heads with spearlike bills
Dive straight into water for fish
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Belted Kingfisher
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Perching Birds All the Songbirds
Ex. Cardinals, Jays, Wrens, Warblers, etc. Includes Loggerhead Shrike & Florida Scrub Jay
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Feather Anatomy
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What is preening? Definition: Preening is the process by which birds groom and care for their feathers. When a bird is preening, she uses her beak to pick through her feathers -- removing any debris, arranging feathers that are out of place, and distributing a special oil that is secreted from a gland at the base of the tail. This oil helps a bird's feathers stay healthy and shiny.
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