Monogamy | Two birds form a pair bond and work together to brood and care for young |
Polygyny | Male attracts and mates with many females. The male builds nest and females cares for young. |
Polyandry | Female attracts and mates with many males |
Polygnandry | Female pair bonds with multiple males and vice versa |
Promiscuity | Each female can mate with multiple males and vice versa |
Extra Pair Copulation | Bonded pair exists but male and female mate with others |
Methods used for attraction | Dance displays, food delivery, mutual preening, singing |
Songs | Longer and usually for territory or courtship |
Calls | Shorter and for contacting one another |
How do birds vocalize | Air comes through the windpipe causing the membrane to vibrate and make sound |
What focalization piece is different | The syrinx |
How do birds learn their songs | They learn from a tutor then repeat till memorized |
Cup nest | Nest shaped like a bowl |
Cup nesters | Robins and humming birds |
Scrape nest | Digging away a depression in the ground and adding stones and leaves |
Scrape nesters | Lapwings and plovers |
Burrow | Shelters in the ground |
Borrowers | King fishers and burrowing owls |
Cavity nest | Chamber in hallowed tree |
Cavity nesters | Woodpeckers and barbets |
Platform nest | Large nest lined with clay for large birds |
Platform nesters | Eagles and storks |
Materials for building nests | Mud, twigs, branches, leaves, moss, grass, feathers, and pine needles |
Step one of egg development | Egg is released from ovary and spends 30 minutes in the infundibulum |
Step two of egg development | 3 hours spent in magnum region where the albumen is laid |
Step three of egg development | 1 hour in isthmus region where the shell membranes are produced |
Step four of egg development | 24 hours in uterus where the hard shell forms and egg get pigmentation |
Part of the egg | Shell, membranes, albumen, chalaza, and yolk |
Nutrients of eggs | 21% lipids and 16% proteins |
Categories of hatchlings | Precocial and altricial |
Precocial | Mobile, sighted, varying degree of parental care |
Examples of precocial chicks | Canada goose, wood duck, and killdeer |
Altricial | Non-mobile, blind, extra parental care, and nest bound |
Examples of altricial chicks | American robin, bald eagle, and blue jay |
How do birds find food | Sense of smell, by memory, and through observation |
Different categories for foraging | Chasing, ambushing, tools, grazing, and probing |
Behaviors to alert predators | Alert calls and mobbing |
Number of birders | Tens of millions |
Amount that borders contribute | $20 billion |
Main threats for vulnerability | Urbanization, deforestation, climate change, disease, invasive species, and hunting and trapping |