IBIO 360 Exam 2
Archaeopteryx
"ancient wing," oldest known bird, asymmetrical flight feather and fossil from mid-Jurassic 150 MYA found in Solnhofen in 1860-1
beta-keratin
A fiber protein that is the principal component of feathers (90%), long lasting, resistant to microbial attack
Paleognathae
All extant sp flightless, flighted ancestors in N Hemisphere, split from Ornithurines in Cretaceous, flightlessness/gigantism evolved independently after dispersal to Gondwanan landmasses
oceanic islands
An island that rises from the ocean floor, high endemism, weedy tramp sp from multiple regions, extinction rampant, small avifauna
Caribbean, Andes, African mountains, Indonesia
Area with the greatest endemic sp richness
SE Brazil, Indonesia
Area with the greatest threatened sp richness
Lee Creek
Collection of Miocene-Pliocene fossils, old Phosphate mine, mostly fragmented and unassociated, most diverse/abundant Pliocene marine avifauna
Wing propelled diving
Common feature of Plotopterids, Auks, and Procellariiformes
Allopatry
Condition in which two or more populations live in different geographic areas, leads to speciation
sympatry
Condition in which two or more populations live in the same geographic area, or close enough to permit interbreeding
Allochrony
Speciation that occurs when species within the same range breed at different times
Pelagornithids
Extinct "false-toothed birds" in order Odontopterygiformes, 59-2.5 MYA, fragmentary thin bones, includes largest ever flying bird, marine, pseudoteeth are bony outgrowths for holding prey
Confuciusornis
Extinct Cretaceous group (125-120 MYA), order Confuciusornithiformes, toothless and beaked, heavy non-kinetic skull, pygostyle, small sternal keel, hole in humerus, wing claws, no alula, scalation like modern birds, abundant
Ichthyornis
Extinct Cretaceous group (89-83.5 MYA), toothed, fish-like biconcave vertebrae, strong fliers, gull-like, rapid growth
Enantiornithes
Extinct Cretaceous group, worldwide, diverse, toothed, wing claws, small, different articulation between scapula and coracoid, long pygostyle, long central rectrices, slow growth
Presbyornis
Extinct Eocene group (62-55 MYA), widespread, early waterfowl relative, filter-feeder, colonial, mass deaths due to botulism?
Hesperornis
Extinct Late Cretaceous group (84-78 MYA), large, flightless, aquatic, inland marine seas, toothed beak, foot-propelled divers, legs possibly attached to body up to ankle, long cnemial crest
Gastornithiformes
Extinct group containing Gastornis "terror-bird," Paleocene-Eocene (56-45 MYA), N Hemisphere, basal to Anseriformes, herbive (calcium isotopes, jaw musculature, legs, claws, beak)
Teratornithidae
Extinct group of Late Miocene vultures (8 MYA), heavy bill and broad gape, New World, heaviest flying bird, dependent on mountain updrafts, scavenged or grabbed large slow prey
Paleolodus
Extinct lineage of swimming flamingos, abundant
Cretaceous-Tertiary Extinction
Extinction event about 65 MYA, caused extinction of all Enantiornithes and nearly all Ornithurines, followed by explosive adaptive radiation
Dromornithidae
Family from Oligocene to recent times (25 MYA- 20 KYA), large Galloanseres, Australia, hooflike foot, unhooked beak, no keel, herbivore, "thunderduck"
Mohoidae
Family of O'os, five sp all extinct between 1860-1987, endemic to Hawaii
Aepyornithidae
Family of elephant birds (3 sp ex), found on Madagascar, heaviest known birds, largest egg, olfactory adapted w/ weak vision
Juncitarsus
Group from Eocene, N Hemisphere, unmodified bill, ancestral to grebe-flamingo clade, colonial, salt glands
Penguin
Group originated in Paleocene (62 MYA) in New Zealand/Antarctica, flighted ancestor, dense bones, S Hemisphere
Hawaii
Islands formed 4-1.8 MYA, volcanic, landbirds arose as waifs, decreased after Polynesian settlement ~300 AD, disappeared after European settlement
continental shelf island
Islands in shallow water, reduced subset of avifauna of adjacent continent, few endemics
La Brea
LA tarpits that preserve record of Pleistocene megafauna, predators, and scavengers; 140 bird sp, 60% diurnal raptors/scavengers
Australia
Landmass where Pleistocene fauna included Progura and Genyornis, made extinct by use of fire by humans
Nearctic
Large region; N America; low diversity; much glaciated in Pleistocene; mostly severe climate; homogeneous habitat; moderate number of islands; 750 sp; Parulidae, Vireonidae, Cardinalidae, Passerellidae, Mimidae; many sp migrate (1)
Palearctic
Largest biogeographic region; Europe, N Asia, and N Africa; low diversity, center of evolution for many groups, partly glaciated in the Pleistocene, severe climate, homogeneous habitats, few islands; 70 fam, 1025 sp; Phylloscopidae, Emberizidae, Carduelidae, Prunellidae; many sp migratory (3)
Cathartidae
New World Vultures, appeared in New and Old worlds in Oligocene, most extinct by end of the Pleistocene
problems with species concepts
No definition works for all organisms, levels of genetic divergence characterizing species varies
high aspect ratio
long and skinny wings, good for gliding
Cariamiformes
Order of real "terror birds," 62-2 MYA, 18 sp Phorusracidae and 6 sp Batornithidae, apex carnivores, fast-running, hooked beak and curved talons, 3-10' tall
Tertiary Period
Paleogene (Paleocene, Eocene, Oligocene Epochs) and Neogene (Miocene, Pliocene Epochs) Periods
Polynesian
Region consisting of volcanic islands and coral atolls; smallest region; no land mammals, all species waifs; many extinctions
Australasian
Region containing Australia, New Zealand, New Guinea; moderate size; anthropogenic disturbance; large flightless sp extinct by 40000 BP; passerine radiation; convergent avifauna; mostly dry, severe aridification and salinization; 75 fam, 900 sp; 7 fam endemic to Aus, 9 to region; many migratory and nomadic sp; affinities wih oriental and Antarctic regions (6)
Oriental
Region containing India, SE Asia, w Indonesia, Philippines; smallest realm; desertification common; islands connected during low sea level periods; varied habitats; many islands; Wallace's line; 70 fam, 2600 sp; 6 endemic fam (Megalaimidae, Irenidae, Aegithinidae, Chloropseidae, Pnoepygidae, Elachuridae); many montane sp migrate, hosts northern migrants; affinities with Palearctic, Ethiopian (5)
Ethiopian
Region containing subsaharan Africa, S Arabia, Madagascar, Indian Ocean islands; large; limited glaciation; forests shrinking; mostly desert, grassland, savanna; 70 fam (15 endemic), 1550 sp; Bucerotidae, Ploceidae, Laniidae, Alaudidae; hosts many migrants; shares 30% of genera w/ Palearctic (2)
New Zealand
Region in Australasia; separated from Gondwana 80 MYA; 6 endemic fam, 112 endemic sp (18 ex, 28 endangered); ancient lineages include Apterygiformes, Acanthisittidae
Andean/Argentine
Region in sSA; less diverse than tropical regions; usually drab; diverse waterfowl, finches, cormorants
New Guinean
Region in the Australasian realm; 2nd largest island; 7 endemic fam; mountainous and dissected
Neotropical
Region including SA, CA, and S Caribbean; large tropical portion; S portion glaciated, causing expansion and contraction of forests; diverse habitat, elevation, and climate (70% low mesic forest); 4000 sp, 31 endemic fam (Furnariidae, Formicariidae); Trochilidae, Tyrannidae, Thraupidae; few sp migrate (4)
Madagascan
Region separated from Africa and India; major anthropogenic habitat loss; 6 endemic extant fam (Brachypteracidae, Leptosomatidae, Philepittidae, Vangidae, Mesitornithidae, Bernieridae); extinct Aepyornithidae; moderate diversity, 50% sp endemic
Caribbean
Region that may be considered part of the Nearctic or Neotropical; larger islands closer to mainland have more sp; 7 endemic fam; many endangered/extinct sp
Antarctic
Region; several seasbirds, only one migratory landbird; Emperor Penguin breeds in the Antarctic winter; sp have adaptations to harsh climate
homeothermy
Regulating, maintenance of constant body temp via physiological means, primary reason birds have feathers
reproductive isolation
Separation of species or populations so that they cannot interbreed and produce fertile offspring, considered test of species status
Parapatric
Speciation along common edge of range of both populations
Hybridization
Speciation that mixes two parental species and forms a stable daughter population
Suboscines
Suborder Tyranni, simpler syringeal musculature, 1000 sp in Neotropic region
Saharo-Arabian
Subregion that is mostly desert, flyover country for migrants; Pteroclidae, Alaududae, Wheatears, and Sylviid warblers
theory of island biogeography
The number of species on an island is determined by a balance between the immigration rate from other inhabited areas and the extinction rate of species established on the island. The model predicts that at some point the rates of immigration and extinction will reach an equilibrium point that determines the island's average species diversity
Vicariance
The physical splitting of a population into smaller, isolated populations by a geographic barrier.
Wallace's Line
The zoogeographical boundary proposed by Alfred Russel Wallace that separates the marsupial fauna of Australia and New Guinea from the non-marsupial fauna of Indonesia
Oscines
True song birds
plumage
a bird's feathers collectively
N Andes
area with the greatest total sp richness
subfossil
bone not old enough to have become completely mineralized as a fossil
subspecies
concept introduced in 20th Century, combined many distinct allopatric forms under BSC, recent splitting has occurred
Eocene
epoch by which all major modern orders are present, 50 MYA
Pliocene
epoch by which many modern genera are present by
Oligocene
epoch by which most modern families are present by
Archaeornithes
extinct Jurassic group of birds including Archaeopteryx
Pterylae
feather tracts, lacking in screamers mousebirds and penguins, most on head and neck, contain <2,000-25,000 feathers total
downy
feathers that can be identified based on taxon-specific barbules (microstructures)
bristle
feathers with sensory corpuscles at the base, almost all on the head, easily cleaned
Thomas Huxley
first to propose in 1868 that birds and therapod dinosaurs are closely related
remiges
flight feathers, asymmetrical in flying birds, provide thrust on downstroke and aerodynamic sirface, attached to ulna and hand bones, 3-16 (usually 10)
melanosomes
fossilized pigments that allow paleontologists to reconstruct pigment patterns in therapod feathers
Tramp species
good colonizers, poor competitors
Pygostylia
group of birds with the end of tail fused into pygostyle
Therapods
group sharing features such as lightly built skull, hollow limb bones, strap-like shoulder blade, 3 clawed fingers, feathers, and semilunate carpal bone with archaeopteryx
serrated comb
leading edge of primaries on nocturnal owls that break up wind and reduce turbulance
avian keratin
less elastic protein found in the beak, claws, and scales of birds
reptilian
origin of archaeopteryx features including teeth, separate clawed fingers, and long bony tail
avian
origin of archaeopteryx features including wings, flight feathers, reversed hallux, and furculum
barbule extension
outer surface of nocturnal owl feathers that dampen wind sounds and inhibit rustling
aftershaft
second shaft coming out of the quill of a feather, usually plumulaceous, well-developed in ratites, lacking in columbiformes
low aspect ratio
short and wide wings, good for maneuverable flying
learned
songs found in oscine passerines, may be different regionally (dialects), imitation common
innate
songs that are known from birth, important to mate recognition, helpful for judging species relationships
Holarctic
term sometimes used to describe both the Nearctic and Palearctic regions; most sp migrate; waterfowl, loons, grebes, shorebirds, raptors, owls
latitudinal diversity gradient
the increase in species diversity from the poles to the equator
Dispersal
the movement of organisms from one place to another
feather
unique skin derivatives found only on birds and some dinosaurs; provide insulation, aerodynamics, and communication/camouflage; secondary roles include locomotion, sound production, hearing, protection, cleanliness, water repellency and transport, tactile sensation, support, toxic defense, flight sound reduction, and digestive aid
The Feather Atlas
way to identify flight feathers of NA birds