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WATCHING BIRDS

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Title: WATCHING BIRDS


1
WATCHING BIRDS
AN INTRODUCTION TO ORNITHOLOGY
2
TODAYS AGENDA
  • VOICE
  • SONG
  • SOUND
  • PURPOSE
  • THE BREEDING CYCLE - I
  • NESTS EGGS
  • COURTSHIP
  • TERRITORY
  • THE BREEDING CYCLE II
  • HATCHING
  • DEVELOPMENT OF YOUNG
  • CARE OF YOUNG

3
  • WHO SINGS?
  • ANNUAL SONG CYCLE
  • DAILY SONG CYCLE
  • SONG ENVIRONMENT
  • CALLS
  • MIMICRY

4
SOUND
  • BIRDS ARE DISTINCTIVE BY THE VARIETY OF SOUNDS
    THEY MAKE
  • SOUND SEEMS TO BE INSTINCTIVE BUT EXPERIMENTS
    HAVE INDICATED THAT SOUND CAN SOMETIMES BE
    LEARNED FROM THEIR SURROUNDINGS

5
  • SOUNDS COMMUNICATE MESSAGES
  • HUMMINGBIRDS, NIGHTHAWK, SNIPE USE WINGS TO MAKE
    SOUNDS
  • WOODPECKERS HAMMER ON HOLLOW LIMBS BRANCHES
  • RUFFED GROUSE USES FLAPPING FEATHERS
  • PRAIRIE CHICKEN PASSES AIR THROUGH INFLATABLE
    AIR SACKS

6
VOICE
  • THE ABILITY TO LEARN VOCALIZATIONS IS LIMITED TO
    BIRDS HUMANS
  • MOST BIRDS CAN BE IDENTIFIED BY THEIR VOICES

7
SONG
  • BIRDS SONGS CONTAIN MORE NOTES THAN HUMANS CAN
    HEAR
  • MALES DO MOST OF THE SINGING
  • IN A FEW CASES BOTH SEXES SING
  • BLUEBIRDS, N. ORIOLE, CARDINAL, WHITE- THROATED
    SPARROW
  • MOCKINGBIRDS MALES FEMALES MAINTAIN SEPARATE
    TERRITORIES

8
ANNUAL SONG CYCLE
  • USUALLY SING ONLY THE APPROPRIATE SONG FOR THE
    TIME OF THE YEAR TO COMMUNICATE THE APPROPRIATE
    MESSAGE.
  • SONG DEFENDS TERRITORY ATTRACT MATES DURING
    NESTING SEASON
  • MOST SONGS ARE VIGOROUS AND CONTINUOUS

9
ANNUAL SONG CYCLE
  • DIFFERENT BIRDS HAVE DIFFERENT SCHEDULES
  • OWLS JAN./FEB
  • ROBINS SOMETIMES SING AS EARLY AS DECEMBER (IN
    TEXAS THEY USUALLY JUST CLUCK)

10
SONG SEASONAL CHANGES
  • RELATED TO REPRODUCTION
  • SOME BIRDS MAY PRACTICE DURING MIGRATION
  • MAY NOT BE COMPLETE SONGS
  • SINGING TAPERS OFF AFTER ESTABLISHING A
    TERRITORY, FINDING A MATE, RAISING YOUNG

11
SONG SEASONAL CHANGES
  • AMERICAN REDSTART SINGS WHILE BUILDING NEST
    THEN STOPS COMPLETELY
  • HOUSE WREN SINGS WHILE CONTINUING TO RAISE YOUNG

12
DAILY SONG CYCLE
  • BIRDS SING MOST FREQUENTLY ENERGETICALLY DURING
    THE MORNING OFTEN BEFORE DAWN
  • BIRDS LEAVE THEIR SINGING PLACE BEFORE SINGING
  • INSECT EATERS USUALLY SING BEFORE SEED EATERS
    HOLE NESTERS ARE USUALLY LATE SINGERS

13
DAILY SONG CYCLE
  • SOMETIMES BIRDS STOP SINGING ENTIRELY IN EARLY
    AFTERNOON WHEN THEY SEEM TO REST
  • LATE AFTERNOON EVENING IS A PERIOD OF RENEWED
    SONG ACTIVITY
  • SOME BIRDS SING ALL DAY
  • RED EYED VIREO 1 SECOND SONG, 22,000 TIMES IN
    TEN HOURS

14
SONG CYCLE
  • SOME BIRDS SING WHEN THERE IS MOONLIGHT
  • SOME SING DIFFERENT SONGS AT DIFFERENT TIMES OF
    THE DAY
  • THRUSHES EVENING SONGS, (DO THEY MEAN SOMETHING
    DIFFERENT?)

15
SONG CYCLE
  • SONG FOR MOST BIRDS IS THE MOST EFFECTIVE FORM OF
    COMMUNICATION
  • SOUND TRAVELS FARTHER THAN SIGHT
  • ESTABLISHING TERRITORY SOUNDS ARE LOUD. USUALLY
    FIND SOUND RESONANT AREAS USE HIGHER PITCHES
  • SHRUB SINGING IS USUALLY HIGHER PITCHED THAN
    TREETOP SINGING

16
CALLS
  • SHORT UNMUSICAL SOUND ARE CALLS
  • CALLS EXPRESS AGGRESSION, ALARM, DANGER, FOOD
    LOCATION, OTHER INFORMATION
  • CALLS ARE HEARD THROUGHOUT THE YEAR

17
CALLS
  • WATCH BEHAVIOR TO DETERMINE THE MEANING OF THE
    CALLS
  • BIRDS ALSO COMMUNICATE BY GESTURES DISPLAYS

18
CALLS
  • AGGRESSIVE CALLS ARE MOST WIDESPREAD
  • DISPUTES OVER TERRITORY, A MATE, NESTING
    MATERIAL, OR FOOD
  • PREVENTS PHYSICAL DAMAGE TO EACH BIRD INSTEAD OF
    FIGHTING

19
CALLS
  • CALLS HELP FLOCKS STAY TOGETHER. MAY INFORM
    OTHERS OF FOOD SOURCES
  • CALLS MADE BY NON-TERRITORIAL BIRDS LIKE GULLS
    WHEN THERE IS MORE FOOD THAN THEY CAN EAT.

20
DANGER ALARM CALLS
  • OFTEN RECOGNIZED UNDERSTOOD BY OTHER SPECIES
  • GEESE, CROWS, SOME OTHER BIRDS ALWAYS HAVE A
    LOOKOUT FOR DANGER WHILE OTHERS FEED
  • BLUE JAY ALARM CALLS MAKE OTHER BIRDS SILENT
  • DIFFERENT INTENSITY ALARM CALLS DEPEND ON THE
    DANGER BIRDS MAY ALSO HAVE AN ALL CLEAR CALL
    WHEN DANGER IS PASSED

21
DANGER ALARM CALLS
  • DUCKLINGS MAKE CHEEPING NOISES BEFORE THEY HATCH
  • MAY HELP MOTHER RECOGNIZE THEM WHEN THEY HATCH
  • CHICKS BEG NOISILY FOR FOOD
  • USUALLY THE NOISIEST BEGGAR IS FED FIRST

22
DANGER ALARM CALLS
  • BIRDS ALSO HAVE CALLS FOR FULL, CONTENTED, WARM
    COLD, WET, OR CONFRONTED WITH AN ENEMY
  • SMALL BIRDS HAVE HIGH ALARM NOTES THE PREDATOR
    MAY NOT HEAR THEM
  • SCOLDING NOTES ARE HARSH EASY TO LOCATE
    ENABLING OTHER BIRDS TO LOCATE THE BIRD AND
    ASSIST.

23
DANGER ALARM CALLS
  • BEGGING CALLS ARE LOUD ROUGH TO HELP PARENTS
    FIND THEM
  • ALARM CALLS OF YOUNG BIRDS ARE THINNER HARDER
    TO LOCATE

24
MIMICRY
  • LIMITED TO BIRDS AND HUMANS
  • MOCKINGBIRDS DO NOT FOOL OTHER SPECIES A
    POTENTIAL PROBLEM OTHERWISE
  • TALKING BIRDS SUCH AS PARROTS ARE LESS COMMON
    THAN MIMICS
  • AFRICAN GRAY PARROTT PROBABLY THE BEST
  • CROWS JAYS CAN TALK AS WELL
  • BIRDS DO NOT REALLY UNDERSTAND THE MEANING OF
    WHAT THEY SAY
  • CANNOT PUT TOGETHER SENTENCES THEY HAVE NOT HEARD
    SPOKEN

25
SOUNDS
  • VOCALIZATION DEVELOPMENT
  • SOUND PRODUCTION

26
DEVELOPMENT OF VOCALIZATIONS
  • IMPORTANT FROM THE TIME BIRDS HATCH
  • PASSERINES REARED IN COMPLETE SILENCE DEVELOP
    POOR SONGS
  • MOST LEARNING IS ACCOMPLISHED IN THE FIRST YEAR
    OF LIFE
  • SOME BIRDS START PRACTICE AS A NESTLING
  • SONG SPARROWS - _at_ 13 DAYS
  • ROBINS - _at_ 21 DAYS
  • Brown Thrashers - _at_ 44 days
  • Sub songs
  • Usually while at rest

27
HOW SOUND IS MADE
  • NO SYRINX
  • TURKEY VULTURES, STORKS, OSTRICHES HAVE A
    SYRINX BUT NO MUSCLES TO MOVE IT.
  • PASSERINES ARE DIVIDED INTO TWO GROUPS
  • OSCINES SUBOSCINES
  • DETERMINES BY THE ARRANGEMENT OF VOICE MUSCLES
    THE MORE MUSCLES THE BETTER THE SONG
  • ALL NORTH AMERICAN PASSERINES ARE OSCINES EXCEPT
    THE FLYCATCHERS WHICH PRODUCE WHISTLE OR
    FLUTELIKE NOTES

28
  • SOUND IS PRODUCED BY MUSCLES OF THE SYRINX IN
    TRACHEA AT THE BOTTOM OF THE WIND PIPE BEFORE IT
    GOES INTO THE LUNGS
  • AIR VIBRATES PAST A MEMBRANE AND MUSCLES
    ADJUSTMENTS VARY THE SOUND PITCH
  • SOME BIRDS CAN ONLY HISS GRUNT OR BOOM

29
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30
THE BREEDING CYCLETERRITORY, COURTSHIP, NEST
EGGS
  • ADAPTIVE SIGNIFICANCE
  • TERRITORY
  • BEGINNING OF BREEDING CYCLE
  • PAIR BONDS COURTSHIP
  • THE NEST
  • EGGS
  • INCUBATION

31
COMMON FEATURES OF AVIAN REPRODUCTION
  • EGGS LAID IN SAFE PLACE
  • ENOUGH FOOD IS AVAILABLE FOR THE YOUNG

32
BREEDING AGE IS SUBJECT TO THE ENVIRONMENT
  • MOST SMALL BIRDS BREED THE FOLLOWING SPRING
  • OR _at_ 10 MONTHS OLD
  • REDWING BLACKBIRDS FEMALES BREED FIRST SPRING
    MALES SECOND SPRING
  • OLDER MALES ARE BETTER ABLE TO HOLD A SUITABLE
    TERRITORY
  • WHEN THE FEEDING TECHNIQUES TAKE PRACTICE SKILL
  • MAY WAIT A FEW YEARS BEFORE BREEDING
  • BIRDS TOO YOUNG TO BREED USUALLY HAVE DIFFERENT
    PLUMAGE FROM BREEDING ADULTS

33
THE BREEDING CYCLE
  • TIMED TO TAKE PLACE WHEN THE MAXIMUM AMOUNT OF
    FOOD IS AVAILABLE
  • AMERICAN GOLDFINCH BREEDS LATE SUMMER FOR THISTLE
    SEEDS
  • AUSTRALIAN OUTBACK BREEDING TAKES PLACE AFTER
    RAINFALL
  • BIRDS USUALLY DONT BREED WHERE THEY WINTER

34
FEMALES ARRIVE
  • ARRIVE WHEN THERE IS ENOUGH FOOD AVAILABLE
  • MALES USUALLY ARRIVE TO BREEDING AREA FIRST
  • BEGIN SINGING DISPLAYS
  • START TO DEFEND A TERRITORY
  • SOMETIME THERE IS A SEVERAL WEEK DELAY BETWEEN
    THE ARRIVAL OF FEMALES AND MALES
  • WHEN TERRITORIES ARE ALREADY SET UP

35
SOME ARRIVE TOGETHER
  • SOME ARRIVE TOGETHER
  • DUCKS GEESE BREEDING SEASON IS VERY SHORT
  • BREEDING ALWAYS(?) OCCURS IN AREA OF FEMALE'S
    BIRTH
  • IS SHE MORE FAMILIAR WITH THE AREA?
  • IS THERE A BETTER CHANCE OF SUCCESS?

36
BREEDING AGES
  • Some birds wait longer to gain the personal
    experience end up producing more young than
    individuals breeding sooner
  • Common terns wait until their third year
  • Herring gulls wait four years
  • Bald eagles 3 5 years
  • Wandering albatrosses never breed younger than 9
    years and often not until they are eleven
  • In Australian deserts the opposite is true
  • Some finches parakeets can breed at 2 months
    when the rains come

37
TERRITORY, COURTSHIP, NESTS EGGS
  • REPRODUCTIVE STRATEGIES
  • EACH SPECIES FOLLOWS A FAIRLY FIXED PLAN
  • MOST EFFICIENT FOR THAT SPECIES IN THEIR
    PARTICULAR ENVIRONMENT
  • THE BIOLOGICAL IMPERATIVE
  • RAISE AS MANY NEW BIRDS AS CAN BE SUCCESSFULLY
    RAISED
  • BIRDS DONT WORRY ABOUT OVERPOPULATION

38
FUNCTION OF TERRITORY
  • SPACES BREEDING PAIRS, PROVIDING EACH PAIR WITH A
    PLACE TO MAKE A NEST
  • MAKES EGGS HARDER TO FIND BY PREDATORS BY SPACING
    THE NESTS
  • DISTRIBUTES EVENLY THE SPECIES IN EACH NEST
    WITHOUT UNNECESSARY COMPETITION
  • COLONIES OF NESTING BIRDS THE ADVANTAGES OF
    BEING TOGETHER OUTWEIGHS THE DISADVANTAGES

39
TERRITORY
  • NEARLY ALL BIRDS HAVE A SPACE THAT THEY DEFEND
    AGAINST OTHER MEMBERS OF THEIR SPECIES. THESE
    ARE TERRITORIES.
  • TERRITORIES MAY BE SQUARE MILES OR ONLY A FEW
    FEET DEPENDING ON THE SPECIES

40
TERRITORY
  • A WAY THAT ALL OUT FIGHTING IS AVOIDED IS BY
    INSTITUTIONALIZING CONFLICTS INTO TERRITORIES
  • A TERRITPORIAL INDIVIDUAL WILL TYPICALLY DEFEND A
    SPECIFIC AREA PARTICULARLY AGAINST INTRUSION OF
    CONSPECIFICS
  • CONSPECIFICS ARE INDIVIDUALS THAT AN INDIVIDUAL
    IS MOST DIRECTLY IN COMPETITION
  • TERRITIORIES THAT ARE NOT DEFENDED ARE CALLED
    HOME RANGES

41
TERRITORIES MAY BE PERMANENT OR TEMPORARY,
DEFENDED BY ONE INDIVIDUAL OR MANY AND MAY BE
ESTABLISHED TO GUARD SPACE, FOOD, MATES,
ETC. TERRITORIES ARE MORE LIKELY TO WIN FIGHTS
AGAINST TRESPASSERS HAS MORE TO LOSE WILLING
TO RISK MORE TO WIN MAY BE OLDER MORE EXPERIENCED
FIGHTER TERRITORIALITY REPRESENTS AN UNEVEN
PARTITIONING OF RESOURCES THAT CAN HAVE A
MINIMIZING EFFECT ON THE ECOSYSTEMS CARRYING
CAPACITY FOR THAT BIRD.
42
TERRITORY
Food determines the size of territory Golden
eagle 75 square miles Small songbirds
sometimes less than ½ acre Territories follow
shapes of the land Circles and ovals are easier
to defend Must have suitable water
43
AGONISTIC BEHAVIORS
  • Aggressive behavior between conspecifics usually
    involves fighting over a limiting resource such
    as food water, space or mates.
  • Depending on scarcity of resource fighting can
    range from fighting to the death to much safer
    ritualistic behavior
  • Birds risk injury or death whenever they engage
    in aggressive behavior
  • Birds often avoid fighting unless there is a sure
    indication that they will win without incurring
    injury or the resource is worth fighting for.

44
Crest erect nervousness Preening Crest low
during Maintenance activities Musical call
Sidling displaying Crests elevated Displacement
behavior foraging
45
  • Single wing flashing
  • toward other bird when at right angles
  • Double wing flashing
  • When facing
  • Normal tail raising
  • Species identification
  • Aggressive tail raising with motives to attack or
    flee
  • Flight intention
  • Conflict fight or flee
  • Mutual upward display
  • Fight flee in balance
  • One flees when drive to flee exceeds drive to
    fight
  • Threat display
  • Appeasement display
  • Head retracted, wing flutter
  • Freezing
  • Aggression submission

46
0 - 30 degrees foraging, drinking, courting 30
90 degrees various stages of aggressive
encounters - fighting
47
DISPALCEMENT
RELEASERS
48
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49
Birds often have sophisticated rituals in which
they attempt to bluff their opponent into backing
down, they usually have a good sense of when to
retreat as good losers from a lost cause Rarely
do birds actually seriously harm the other
defending territory
50
COURTSHIP DISPLAYS
51
COURTSHIP ESTABLISHING A BOND
  • In many cases potential partners must go through
    a complex courtship interaction unique to the
    species before mating
  • Fixed action Patterns triggered by some action
    of the other partner and initiating in turn the
    next required behavior.
  • This assures each animal the others intent (not
    a threat) and that the others species, gender,
    and physiological condition are all correct.

52
  • Male may treat female as intruder initially esp.
    if plumage is similar
  • Indicates by behavior she is not a male
  • Some displays both sexes take part Western
    grebes, Sand- hill Cranes, Whooping Cranes

53
  • Feeding female
  • Female give begging calls of young adopts a
    begging posture
  • Male feeds female on nest
  • Brightly colored passerine males do little
    incubation
  • Males defend territory watch for predators, some
    bring food to female
  • Usually both parents feed hatchlings

54
  • MALE BRINGS STICKS
  • MALE PRESENTS STICK
  • FEMALE ARRANGES STICKS

55
ADULT COURTSHIP BEHAVIOR - BILL CLASPING
56
  • GREETING CEREMONY
  • ONE MATE ARRIVES
  • MATE SOUNDS WITH NECK ERECT
  • USUALLY RAISE CREST PLUMES ABD FEATHERS ON NECK

57
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58
MATING STRATEGIES
  • Refers to how birds pair up to mate
  • promiscuous systems-
  • One parent does not participate at all in the
    raising of the offspring low likelihood of
    subsequent with same individual
  • Monogamous Systems
  • two parents share raising of offspring high
    likelihood of mating with an individual
  • Most monogamous birds remain only together for
    one season although they may nest following years
    because both have returned to the same territory.
  • Loyalty is to territory not the mate
  • Life spans of individual birds usually not long
    enough to give advantage to having single
    permanent mate
  • Ducks geese, raptors, many seabirds that live
    longer may mate for life.
  • They are usually more successful at raising young
    after they have 1 years experience
  • Polygamous high likelihood of subsequent mating
    with more than one individual

59
  • Courtship can also involve some degree of
    assessment of one individual by the other or its
    territory.
  • That they will increase the likelihood of
    successfully producing viable offspring, have the
    best genes or behaviors.

60
POLYGAMOUS STRATEGIES
  • Polygyny one male mates with several females
  • Female can raise young without the aid of a mate
    when there is no advantage to doing so
  • Redwing blackbird male may have four mates
  • Marsh hawk
  • Meadow larks
  • Swamp sparrow
  • Yellow-headed blackbird
  • Polyandry one female mates with several males
  • Young feed themselves from the time they hatch
  • Common only in a few tropical families with a
    long breeding season
  • Phalaropes
  • females more brightly colored than males
  • Pursue males
  • Males build nest
  • Males hatch eggs
  • Males care for chicks
  • Sanderlings
  • One nest incubated by male - One nest incubated
    by female

61
PARENTAL INVESTMENT
  • Birds that are destined to invest a lot of time
    energy into parenting would prefer to mate with
    individuals who bring more to the mating than
    less
  • Typically the gender that invests the most in the
    offspring is the female.
  • Sexual selection is the means by which gender
    (typically males) either compete directly over a
    females or compete for a females favorable
    attention these battles in turn select for
    secondary sexual characteristics that aid in the
    fighting of battles over females or the
    attracting of females.
  • Some species both parents invest heavily in the
    raising of offspring sexual selection impacts
    both genders.

62
NESTS
  • To hold and shelter eggs until they hatch
  • To protect chicks until they are ready to leave
    the nest
  • Rookeries
  • Every species builds a distinctive nest
  • Some birds are flexible about the nests location
  • Small birds try to conceal their nests
  • Nests are easiest to locate during construction
  • Some birds have no nest at all
  • Whip-poor-will will nest on forest floor
  • Emperor penguins
  • Minimal nests - east tern scrapes together a few
    pebbles

63
NEST MATERIALS
  • Northern Parula Warbler - will only nest in
    Spanish moss in south/ lichens in the north
  • Many use sticks, grasses, plant fibers
  • Larger birds use mostly sticks
  • Hawks and owls use old crow nests
  • Meadowlarks build roofs over nests
  • Barn swallows use mud and saliva
  • Robins line nest with mud
  • Some nests are lined with feather down
  • Hummingbirds us lichens, spider webs and saliva,
    lined with catkins
  • Great Crested Flycatcher uses snake skin or
    pieces of plastic.
  • Male Doves bring females nesting material

64
NEST LOCATION
  • Usually chosen by female
  • Male may lead female to a suitable location
  • Cedar Waxwings seem to choose site jointly
  • Protection
  • Difficult to reach by predators tip of branch
  • Holes
  • Woodpeckers excavate holes
  • Nuthatches, titmice , chickadees dig holes
  • Holes are extremely safe
  • Weather predator protection
  • Young safest in holes
  • Young leave later due to safety

65
NEST CLASSIFICATION
66

Stage I Nests
  • Ground nests nests without structure
  • Simple depressions with or without lining
  • Cryptic coloration or inaccessible

67
CAVITY NESTS
STAGE I NESTS
Caves, crevices burrows, holes in trees, bird
boxes with or without lining
68
STAGE II NESTS
  • Platform nests nests elevated, without
    structure, consisting of loosely assembled
    materials with a shallow depression for eggs

69
STICK PLATFORM NESTS STAGE II
STAGE II NESTS
70
CUPPED NESTS
71
CUPPED NESTS READAPTED TO OTHER SITUATIONS
  • Adherent Cupped Nests
  • Sides are attached by adhesive substance to a
    vertical surface

72
CUPPED GROUND NESTS
STAGE III
  • Nests on the ground.
  • The sides may or may not be extended upward
    arched over the top, making a domed structure

73
STAGE III NESTS
PENDULOUS nests suspended from the rims sides
rather flexible extremely deep cupped with
lower part swinging freely
  • SUSPENDED CUPPED NESTS nests not supported from
    below but from the rims or sides or both
  • PENSILE nests suspended from the rims sides,
    rather stiff

74
CAVITY NESTS
  • Cupped nests in cavities
  • Holes,
  • Bird Boxes, etc.
  • In preformed or natural cavities
  • In cavities excavated by occupant birds

75
FALSE NESTS
  • Cock Nests Or Dummy Nests
  • Carolina Wren
  • Refuge Nests
  • Roost or shelter made anytime, particularly
    fall
  • DUMP NESTS

76
NEST EVOLUTION
77
WEAVER FINCHES
78
GROUP NESTS
  • Smooth- billed Anis up to twenty eggs in a large
    nest
  • Sociable weaver African Weaver Finch, tens to
    hundreds of pairs of nests
  • Communal structure helps maintain a constant
    temperature in nests

79
MEGAPODES
  • Australia Southeast Asia
  • Males spend entire year building nest of sand,
    volcanic ash, rotting vegetation
  • Males adjust amount of composting material to
    incubate eggs
  • Megapodes digs way out of nest , goes off to live
    on its own.
  • Hatch fully feathered and capable of flight

80
BROOD PATCH
81
EGGS
82
EGG SHAPES
83
EGG FORMATION
84
EMBRYO DEVELOPMENT
85
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86
  • Yolk albumen diminish, with the yolk providing
    energy the albumen providing protein and water
  • Energy in the egg is used by the embryo for
    growth maintenance
  • During incubation (of a chicken egg)
  • First day
  • 16 hours - first sign of resemblance to a chick
    embryo
  • 18 hours - appearance of alimentary canal
  • 20 hours - appearance of vertebral column
  • 21 hours - beginning of nervous system
  • 22 hours - beginning of head
  • 24 hours - beginning of eye
  • Second day
  • 25 hours - beginning of heart
  • 35 hours - beginning of ear
  • 42 hours - heart beats
  • Third day
  • 60 hours (shown to the right) - beginning of nose
  • 62 hours - beginning of legs

EGG DEVELOPMEMT
  • Fourth day - beginning of tongue
  • Fifth day - formation of reproductive organs and
    differentiation of sex
  • Sixth day - beginning of beak
  • Eighth day - beginning of feathers
  • Tenth day - beginning of hardening of beak
  • Thirteenth day - appearance of scales and claws
  • Fourteenth day - embryo gets into position
    suitable for breaking shell
  • Sixteenth day - scales, claws and beak becoming
    firm and horny
  • Seventeenth day - beak turns toward air cell
  • Nineteenth day - yolk sac begins to enter body
    cavity
  • Twentieth day - yolk sac completely drawn into
    body cavity embryo occupies practically all the
    space within the egg except the air cell
  • Twenty-first day - hatching of chick

87
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88
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89
THE BREEDING CYCLE - II
  • HATCHING
  • GROWTH DEVELOPMENT
  • LEARNING
  • NEST HELPERS
  • PARASITISM

90
Altricial
Precocial
Nidicolous nest dwelling
- nidifugous
91
PARENTAL CARE
92
PARENTAL CARE
  • Division Of Labor
  • Hatching
  • Recognition Of Young
  • Disposing Of Egg Shells
  • Disposing Of Excrement
  • Brooding
  • Feeding
  • Food
  • Degree Of Dependence
  • Period
  • Mechanics
  • Distribution
  • Frequency
  • Water Grit
  • Defensive Behavior
  • Transportation
  • Teaching/Urging

93
DIVISION OF LABOR
  • MALES OFTEN ACTIVE IN FEEDING
  • MAY OR MAY NOT SHARE BROODING
  • SOMETIMES BRTING FOOD BEFORE HATCHING
  • MALE MAY FEED OLDER NESTLINGS IN CASE OF TWO
    BROODS
  • ROLES MAY VARY IN SPECIES
  • AVIAN NURSEURIES
  • SOME TERNS, OTHERS, GUARD PROTECT ALL YOUNG
    CRECHE
  • ANIS REARED COMMUNALLY IN COMMON NEST SHARING
    INCUBATION, BROODING, FEEDING, OLDER YOUNG ASSIST
    SCRUB JAY

94
HATCHING
  • AWARE WHEN EGGS BECOME PIPPED
  • EGG TURNING CEASES
  • MAY REMOVE PIECES OF CRACKED EGGSHELL OR DUMP
    HATCHLING OUT OF PART OF SHELLONCE SHELL IS
    COMPLETELY OPEN
  • MOST PARENTS PASSIVE DURING HATCHING

95
RECOGNITION OF YOUNG
  • COLONIAL SEABIRDS CAN DISCRIMINATE THEIR OWN
    YOUNG FROM HUNDREDS
  • REJECT OTHER OFFSPRING
  • OTHER BIRDS DO NOT NEED TO DO MORE THAN FEED
    WHATEVER ASKS TO BE FED IN THE NEST
  • LACK OF DISCRIMINATION LEADS TO BROOD OR NEST
    PARASITISM

96
DISPOSING OF EGG SHELLS
  • USELESS CLUTTER AFTER HATCHING
  • POTENMTIAL HAZARD TO NESTLIONG
  • CARRIED AWAY FROM NEST OR EATEN
  • PRECOCIAL BIRDS LEAVE EGGS AND NEST
  • SOME LEAVE EGGSHELLS IN NEST GOSHAWK CUCKOOS

97
DISPOSING OF EXCREMENT
  • MANY HOLE NESTERS WALLOW IN EXCREMENT WITH NO
    NEGATIVE EFFECT
  • MOST NON- PASSERINES LEARN EARLY TO DEFECATE OVER
    EDGE OF NEST OR NEST HOLE
  • PASSERINES SOME NON-PASSERINE YOUNG PRODUCE
    FECAL SACS THAT ARE REMOVE FROM NEST SITE

98
DISPOSING OF EXCREMENT
  • SOME YOUNG PRESENT FECAL SAC TO PARENT
  • DEPOSIT SAC AT EDGE OF NEST
  • EARLY SACS MAY BE EATEN, LATER CARRIED OFF
  • NEST SANITATION MAY WANE OVER TIME

99
DISPOSING OF EXCREMENT
  • EDGE OF NEST MAY BE WHITISH-
  • COATED WITH LIME TOWARD END OF
  • NEST USE

100
BROODING
  • KEEP NESTLING NEXT TO BROOD BATCH
  • MAINTAINS ADEQUATE TEMPERATURE DOE DEVELOPING
    NESTLING
  • BOODING NOT CONSTANT
  • MORE DANGER OF OVERHEATING

101
  • BROODING RHYTHM CHANGES
  • PLUMAGES HELP RETAIN HEAT
  • EARLY ON PARENT CONCEAL NEST WITH BODY
  • BROODING MAY LENGHTEN IN BAD WEATHER
  • COVERED MORE IN THE NIGHT THAN DAY

102
  • PRECOCIAL (NIDIFUGOUS) YOUNG SOON ABLE TO
    FEED THEMSELVES
  • BEGIN TO TASTE THINGS ALMOST IMMEDIATELY
  • SOME PRELIMINARY COACHING MAY BE NEEDED FOR YOUNG
    TO FEED

103
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104
FEEDING
  • PARENTS LAY FOOD ITEMS NEAR YOUNG (LOONS, GREBES,
    CRANES)
  • YOUNG MAY NOT BE ABLE TO CATCH FOOD FOR UP TO 6
    WEEKS

105
FEEDING
  • ALTRICIAL (NIDICOLOUS) YOUNG
  • GULLS, TERNS, COLONIAL NESTERS MAY REMAIN
    INCAPABLE OF PROCURING FOOD ON THE OWN UNTIL
    FLEDGED
  • MAY BE FEED WITHIN A FEW HOURS OF HATCHING

106
FEEDING
  • BAD WEATHER MAY DELAY MEALS
  • USUALY YOUNG CAN GO A DAY OR TWO WITHOUT EATING
  • YOUNG TUBE NOSES CAN GO WEEKS WITHOUT FOOD ON FAT
    RESERVES

107
FEEDING PERIODS
  • PARENTAL FEEDING RANGES FOR ABOUT 4 WEEKS TO 8
    MONTHS OR MORE (ALBATROSSES)
  • HALF OR MORE OF FEEDING PERIOD IS DONE OUTSIDE
    OF NEST
  • MAY EVOKE BEGGING RESPONSE

108
FEEDING PERIODS
  • WEANING PROCESS GRADUAL WITH PARENTS BRINGING
    FOOD LESS FREQUENTLY
  • PROMOTES AGGRESSIVENESS
  • FUELS DRIVE TO FIND OWN FOOD
  • PARENT- YOUNG ENCOUNTERS AFTER YOUNG SELF
    FEEDING

109
MECHANICS OF FEEDING
  • FEEDING RATHER MECHANICAL
  • NO EMOTION
  • DEPENDENT ON RELEASER SIGNALS
  • SPOTS
  • OPEN GAPES

110
  • MOUTH PATTERNS

MECHANICS OF FEEDING
  • GAPE COLOR
  • COLOR MOUTH FLANGES
  • BEGGING CALL
  • USUALLY WILL GIVE FOOD TO ANYTHINGN THAT GAPES
    CHEEPS
  • IF NOTHING GAPES OR CHEEPS PARENT MAY EAT FOOD

111
MORE MECHANICS
  • FOOD TRANFER
  • PARENTS MAY DELIVER ENTIRE CARCASS
  • PARENTS MAY TEAR OFF MANGEABLE PARTS

112
MORE MECHANICS
  • SOME REGURGITATE FOOD AT NEST
  • INTO NEST OR ON GROUND
  • INTO MOUTH OF NESTLING (HUMMERS PUMP FOOD INTO
    NESTLING)
  • BEAK TO BEAK REGURGITATION

113
MECHANICS
  • YOUNG MAY REACH INTO MOUTH OR THROAT OF PARENT
    (SEABIRDS, SOME WADING BIRDS)
  • CONSISTENCY OF FOOD BECOMES COARSER AS YOUNG AGE

114
FOOD DISTRIBUTION
  • PARENTS USUALLY FEED THE MOST AGGRESSIVE NESTLING
  • NESTLING WILL FEED UNTIL IT CAN NO LONGER SWALLOW
    ANY MORE FOOD
  • ONCE FULL BEGGING CEASES
  • SIBLINGS SRE FED IN TURN

115
FOOD DISTRIBUTION
  • WHEN RESPONSES EQUAL PARENT TESTS TO SEE
    SWALLOWING REACTION
  • STAGGERED HATCHING OLDEST BIRD FED FIRST
  • YOUNGEST SIBLINGS WAIT UNTIL OTHERS ARE SATED

116
FREQUENCY OF FEEDING
  • FEEDING USUALLY INCREASES WITH GROWTH
  • DROPS OFF AS WEANING PROGRESSES
  • AT PEAK 20 30 MINUTES DURING DAY
  • MANY SEABIRD ACCUSTOMED TO BEING FED ONLY ONCE
    PER DAY

117
WATER GRIT
  • FOOD CONTAINS WATER NESTLING NEED
  • FEW BIRDS BRING ACTUAL WATER YOUNG
  • SAND GROUSE
  • EURASIAN WHITE STORKS
  • GRIT MAY BE PROVIDED

118
DEFENSIVE BEHAVIOR
  • DEFEND NEST AGAINST PREDATORS
  • FROM PASSIVITY
  • COVERING NEST
  • REMAINING SILENT MOTIONLESS
  • TO SAVAGE AGGRESSION
  • GOSHAWKS
  • SOME OWLS
  • ALARM CALLS
  • (SCATTER COVER, REMAIN STILL)

119
  • DISTRACTION
  • RAISING FEATHERS, SCREAMING, HISSING
  • DIVE-BOMBING
  • MAKING THREAT GESTURES WITHOUT ATTACK
  • COLONIES ACT IN CONCERT TO THREAT

120
TRANSPORTATION OF YOUNG
  • RIDING ON BACK OR UNDER WING OF PARENT, LOONS,
    GREBES, COOTS, SWANS, DUCKS
  • PICKING UP YOUNG
  • IN BILL RAILS
  • LAST DITCH RESCUE
  • EFFORT

121
PARENTAL TEACHING URGING
  • PRECOCIAL CHICKS INTRODUCED TO FOOD
  • OTHER SKILLS APPEAR TO BE INNATE
  • TRIAL ERROR REFINES SKILLS
  • NOT TRANSFERRED INTELLECTUALLY

122
SIBLING RIVALRY
123
LEARNING
  • IMPRINTING
  • HABITUATION
  • TRIAL ERROR
  • CONDITIONING
  • INSIGHT
  • LEARNING
  • INSTINCT
  • FIXED ACTION PATTERNS
  • RELEASERS

124
INSIGHT
RAVENS RECOGNIZE BOX WITH FOOD REWARD
SOLVING SIMPLE PROBLEMS
125
HABITUATION REPEATED STIMULATION NO REWARD OR
PUNISHMENT
CONDITIONING LEARNING BY ASSOCIATION BIRD FEEDER
FOOD
TRIAL ERROR WHAT IS FOOD WHAT IS NOT UNPLEASENT
EXPERIENCES
126
NEST HELPERS
  • ANIS REARED COMMUNALLY IN
  • COMMON NEST SHARING,
  • INCUBATION, BROODING, FEEDING,
  • OLDER YOUNG ASSIST
  • SCRUB JAYS, ACORN WOODPECKERS

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128
NEST PARASITISM
129
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130
HOST SPECIES
PARASITIC SIBLING
131
MIGRATION ORIGINS CONDITIONS FLIGHT
PATHS DISTRIBUTION EXTREMES FACTORS RANGES ATTR
ACTING CARING FOR BIRDS FEEDING WATERING
NESTING PLANTING FIRST AID BIRDWATCHING FIELD
GUIDES OPTICS HOW TO ETC.
132
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