7th Science Birds Word Scramble
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Term | Definition |
Aves | The class birds are in |
Plumage | Feathers |
Avian | pertaining to birds |
To reduce weight, instead of teeth and jawbones birds have ________ ______ made of keratin, reinforced by lightweight bony struts. | Toothless bills |
Unlike the solid bones of most other animals, bird bones are usually hollow and strengthened by internal ______ _______ like that of a steel girder. | cross bracings |
Andean condor | The largest flying bird |
What characteristics do all members of the class Aves share? [six] | Bipdal [two-legged], warmblood, vertebrates,feathers, scally legs, and wings |
Ornithologists | Scientists who study birds |
Birds have a very strong sternum with a large ridge called what? | The Keel |
Clavicles | Collarbones |
The clavicles of a bird are fused together, forming the ___________. | Furcula [wishbone] |
The bird's "thumb" bones support the _____. | Alula, a retractable group of feathers at the front of the wing. |
The "______" bones support the feather on the wing tips. | finger |
Humerus | Upper "arm" bone |
Ulna and Radius | Lower "arm" bone |
The muscles of flying birds are engineered to meet what? | The power demands of flight. |
Pectorals | Flight muscles that correspond to the muscles of the chest |
Pectoralis major | The larger two of the four pectoral muscles |
By using the ________ to raise the wings, God eliminated the need for large, strong back muscles, keeping their weight low. | Pectorals |
What do birds do instead of using a diaphragm? | Birds pump air through the lungs as chest muscles expand and contract the thoractic cavity |
A bird's four chambered heart circulates blood in a pattern similar to what? | Humans and mammals. |
Gizzard | Grinds food, making it easier for the intestine to absorb it. |
Crop | A storage sack in the esophagus. |
Do birds store much solid or liquid waste in their bodies? | NO! |
A bird inhales and exhales how many times for each breath of air through its repiratory system? | Twice |
Of all of God's creations, birds have the best _________. | Eyesight |
Monocular vision | Has a wide field of vision for detecting danger. |
Binocular vision | Allows a narrow field of vision for spotting prey. |
The bird's wings are only ______ _________ for the flight feathers. | narrow supports |
Where are the three basic type of flight feathers found? | Primary-extend from the bird's "hand" to the tips of its wings; Secondary-extend form the back of the ulna; Tertiary-overlap the secondary flight featheres nearest the bird's body |
Flight feathers. | Provide birds with the necessary wing shape for flight; special contour feathers. |
Name three basic type of flight feathers. | Primary, Secondary, and tertiary |
Contour feathers. | Strong feather found on the bird's body wings, and tail. Aids the bird in streamlining. |
Name three general types of feather. | Contour, flight, insulation. |
Insulation feathers | down feathers |
Down feathers | Soft, fluffy feathers close to the bird's body that provide excellent insulation withoug adding much weight. |
Each feather has a shaft. What is a shaft? | A shaft is the hard, hollow "backbone" of the feather |
Barbs | Attached to the shaft are thousands of individual projections; Barbs and contour feathers are "zipped" together by tiny hooks |
Barbs and contour feathers are "zipped" together by tiny hooks called _________. | barbules |
Feathers, which are made of keratin, grow from _________ in the bird's skin. | Follicles |
Preen | groom |
Preen gland | Produces oil that helps condition and waterproof the feathers |
________ ________ are some of the best gliders. | Soaring seabirds |
Instincts | Built in knowledge you do not have to learrn |
Hover | To remain stationary in the air |
Intermittent flight | Alternate flapping with gliding or coasting |
Gliding | The simpilest kind of flight; uses minimal energy |
Some Gliders use hot air, or __________, to gain altitude without expending energy. | thermals |
Soaring | When a bird glides within a thermal to gain altitude |
What surprising activity is against the law in the United States? | To collect feathers belonging to most species. (Or other bird parts) |
Powered flight | Flapping flight; Bird fly by continually flapping its wings |
The most strenuous part of a bird's flight is _________. | Takeoff |
Molt | When a bird replaces its old, broke, or missing feathers as new ones and grown |
Name three reasons birds call. | To attract their mates, to warn other birds of danger, and to announce that food is available. |
Dusting | When birds take a dust bath |
Birds take water baths to clean their skin and feathers of what? | Dust, parasites, excess |
Visual Displays | "Body language" Birds use this to communicate. |
What is anting's purpose? | Exactly why some birds ant is unknown; it is guessed that acid on the ants rids the bird of parasites or skin irritation caused by the growth of new feathers |
Anting is most often practiced when a bird is _______. | molting |
Mobbing | When flocks of small birds attack a large predatory bird; this alerts other birds of the predator's presence and distracts the large bird from the eggs. May even kill the big bird |
Ground nesting birds usually attempt to use what measure to keep predators from their nest | They lure predators from the nest, instead of fighting |
Anting | When birds rub ants on its plumage or sit in the dirt and allow ants to crawl over their feathers |
Rodent running | When a bird nesting in thick grass sneaks away from the nest when a predator is near thet draws attention to itself by screeching and running around then sneaks back to the nest after the preadotr is distracted |
Flock | To gather in large groups, especially just before breading season |
Migration generally occurs in what time of year along routes that run north and south | Fall, or winter |
Migration | The regular (usually yearly) movement of animals between two habitats |
Altitudinal migration | When a bird will move up in altitude not latitude |
Flyaways | Routes birds take when they migrate |
Most male birds perform ___________ __________ to attract a mate. | courtship rituals |
Egg | A complex package designed to nurture and protect the developing bird |
Germinal spot | Where the embryo will develop |
High speed diving wings | Narrow |
What type of wings are needed for maneuvering in close quarters? | Short and broad |
What is a bird's tail designed for? | The type of flight, and the habitat in which the bird lives |
Fast, agile flapping flight needs what type of wings? | Tapered wings |
Scrapea | Scooped out hollow nest on the ground |
Incubation | The keeping of warm eggs for proper development |
Shell | An eggs thick, outermost layer |
Shell membranes | Made of keratin; separate at one end to form an air filled chamber |
Gliding wings | Long and Narrow |
Soaring wing | Large and broad for catching the most air |
Hovering wings | Short and tapered |
Chalaza | A twisted cord that holds the yolk body; allows the germinal spot to remain upright |
Yolk body | The large egg cell produced by the mother bird's ovary |
Yolk | Contained by the yolk body; A nutrient rich fluid for the developing chick |
Albumen | Egg white |
Brood patch | An area on a bird's underside that is without feathers, so it allows the heat from the mother birds body to be transferred to the developing egg |
The shape of a bird's wing depends on what? | On how and where it is designed to fly |
God uniquely designed bills for what? | The kind of food a bird enjoys. |
Seed eating birds have ______, ______ sead eating bills | short, stout |
Bills for spearing fish | Piercing bills |
Bills for hunting birds that feed on terrestrial vertebrates; The upper mandible extends beyond the lower mandible and hook downward in front of it; | Tearing bills |
Large, colorful bills with serrrated edges | Fruit-slicing bills |
Perching feet | Have three forward toes and one hind toe |
Grasping feet | Similar to perching feet but have talons |
Talons | Pointed claws |
Scratching feet | Similiar to perching feet |
Mobility on the ground or in the water depends on what? | The foot design given by God |
Field marks | Various colors, patterns, and marking characterstics of a particular bird species |
Appearance of birds can vary based on _____, ____ and ____ ___ _____. | Gender,age,time of year |
Name the six simpler categories of birds | Perching, birds of prey, water, game, tropical, and flightless birds. |
What, generally, is the type of bird that is a perching bird? | Something like songbirds, wrens, and similar species; small songbird types |
Most small birds are equipped with ______ _____. | perching feet |
Altricial | When a hatched bird is featherless and helpless |
The bee humming bird | The smallest of all birds |
Birds of prey [raptors] | Distinguished by their ability to hunt by snatching prey with grasping feet |
Peregrine falcon | The world's fastest bird |
Diving | When a bird glides down at a very steep angle |
Falconry | Hunting using trained falcons or hawks |
Water birds | Include swimming birds like waterfowl, pelicans,flamingos and gulls. |
Waterfowl | Ducks, geese, and swans |
Ducks | Short necked waterfowl that eat in a variety of ways |
How can you tell ducks and geese apart? | Geese are larger than ducks and have larger necks |
Which of the three has the longest neck? A swan, a duck, or a goose | Swans have the longest necks |
Pelicans | have a unique throat pouch that they use to catch fish |
Game birds | Include many birds that have been hunted for food and other, often edible, birds with similar anatomy |
Except for doves, pigeons, and a few other species, game birds fly how often and where do they nest? | very little, nest on the ground |
Megapodes | A group of game birds that are the only birds in the world not to provide any parental care to their young |
Tropical birds | Live in the warm regions near the equator |
Many tropical birds can be classified in _____ _______. | other groups |
Parrots [name 3] | Include macaws, parakeets, lorikeets, lovebirds, cockatoos, and budgerigars. |
Trogons | A group of brightly-colored tropical birds that eat insects and fruit |
Name three (out of five) flightless birds. | Include ostriches, emus kiwis, rheas, and cassowaries. |
Flightless bird do not have a _____ on the sternum; because of this their pectoral muscles aren't large enough to fly. | Keel |
Emperor and Adelie penguin | The only penguins that actually live in Antarctica year round. |
Penguins | Flightless bird |
Why do birds have air sacs? | To give the bird extra air intake |
Why do birds have air capillaries instead of alveoli like mammals? | Because it allows air to flow through the lungs instead of just in and out |
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nelsonclan
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