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Ornithology:
an introduction to basic concepts
Dr. C. Craig Farquhar
Wildlife Division
Texas Parks and Wildlife Department
Austin, Texas 78744
craig.farquhar@tpwd.state.tx.us
(512) 389-4933
Breeding
Few
Many
American Kestrel (Falco sparverius)
Black-capped Vireo (Vireo atricapilla)
Variable Hawk (Buteo polyosoma)
White-tailed Hawk (Buteo albicaudatus)
Goals for this workshop:
• Bird diversity
• Behavioral characteristics
• Migration
• Conservation
Prothonotary Warbler
feeding Brown-headed
Cowbird chick
Birds (class Aves) have many traits: intelligent, bipedal, warm-blooded,
vertebrate animals that lay eggs.
There are around 10,000 living species, making them the most numerous
tetrapod vertebrates.
• inhabit ecosystems across the globe, from the Arctic to the Antarctic.
• range in size from the 5 cm (2 in) Bee Hummingbird to the 2.7 m (9 ft) Ostrich.
• evolved from theropod dinosaurs during the Jurassic period, around 150–200
Mya (million years ago), and the earliest known bird is the Late Jurassic
Archaeopteryx, c 155–150 Ma.
• characterized by feathers, a beak with no teeth, the laying of hard-shelled eggs,
a high metabolic rate, a four-chambered heart, and a lightweight but strong
skeleton.
• have forelimbs modified as wings and most can fly, with some exceptions
including ratites, penguins, and a number of diverse endemic island species.
• have unique digestive and respiratory systems that are highly adapted for flight.
• many species undertake long distance annual migrations, and many more
perform shorter irregular movements.
Sizes of North American birds
Calliope Hummingbird
California Condor
Birds are resourceful, especially corvids and parrots (e.g., Alex): among the
most intelligent animal species. Some make and use tools, and many social
species exhibit cultural transmission of knowledge across generations.
Woodpecker Finch uses sticks
Brown-headed Nuthatch uses bark
to pry under other bark.
Lammergeier drops bones onto rocks
To break them up.
Bowerbirds construct elaborate nests to attract females.
Great Bowerbirds (Chlamydera nuchalis)
ALEX, the African Grey Parrot
Alex
African Grey Parrot (1976 – 6 Sep 2007).
Dr. Irene Pepperberg, listed Alex's
accomplishments in 1999:
• could identify fifty different objects
and recognize quantities up to six;
• could distinguish seven colors and five
shapes, and understand the concepts
of "bigger", "smaller", "same", and
"different," and
• was learning "over" and "under;‖
• had a vocabulary of about 150 words,
but was exceptional in that he
appeared to have understanding of
what he said.
For example, when Alex was shown an
object and was asked about its shape, color, or material, he could label it
correctly. If asked the difference between two objects, he also answered that,
but if there was no difference between the objects, he said ―none.‖
• When he was tired of being tested, he would say ―I‘m gonna go away,‖ and if the
researcher displayed annoyance, Alex tried to defuse it with the phrase, ―I‘m
sorry.‖
• If he said ―Wanna banana‖, but was offered a nut instead, he stared in silence,
asked for the banana again, or took the nut and threw it at the researcher.
• When asked questions in the context of research testing, he gave the correct
answer approximately 80 percent of the time. In July 2005, Pepperberg reported
that he understood concept of zero.
• Although truly amazing accomplishments, there were skeptics in the scientific
community. Some raised the issue of Operant Conditioning (reinforcement and
punishment), whereby Alex would have been responding to subtle cues rather
than thinking on his own.
• Alex died unexpectedly, age 31, on 7 Sep 2007, apparently related to
atherosclerosis (‗hardening of the arteries‘).
• See more on this amazing bird at: http://www.alexfoundation.org/
Many birds are social.
• communicate using visual signals and through calls and songs,
• participate in social behaviors including cooperative breeding and hunting
(Harris‘s Hawk), flocking (blackbirds, starlings), and mobbing of predators
(many passerines).
• vast majority of bird species are socially monogamous, usually for one
breeding season at a time (―serial monogamy‖), sometimes for years, but
rarely for life.
• other species have breeding systems that are polygynous ("many females,―
grouse, manakins, some hummingbirds, some blackbirds) or, rarely,
polyandrous ("many males,― Galapagos Hawk, some phalaropes, some
shorebirds).
• eggs are usually laid in a nest and incubated by the parents. Most birds have
an extended period of parental care after hatching.
• precocial: leave nest at an early age, young tend to have bigger brains
• altricial: remain in nest for extended periods, brains are smaller but
continue to grow, outgrowing precocial birds at maturity and, hence, have a
wider skill set than precocial birds.
Many bird species are of economic importance:
• mostly as sources of food acquired through hunting or farming;
• some species, particularly songbirds and parrots, are popular as pets.
• other uses include the harvesting of guano (droppings) for use as a fertilizer.
• birds figure prominently in all aspects of human culture from religion to poetry
to popular music.
• very popular sources of local economic welfare, especially in the Lower Rio
Grande Valley:
• The Texas State Comptroller‘s Office recently estimated nature tourism to
comprise between $25.4 billion -- $39.9 billion!
• Nature tourism generates approximately $1 billion in state taxes, $739
million in local taxes, and $1.4 billion of economic activity.
• Alas, about 120–130 species have become extinct as a result of human
activity since the 17th century, and hundreds more before then. Currently
about 1,200 species of birds worldwide are threatened with extinction by
human activities, though efforts are underway to protect them.
What is diversity?
• Biological diversity can take many forms.
• Diversity typically refers to number of species (richness) in a
community.
• However, a more accurate representation of biological
importance takes into account number of individuals
(evenness or abundance).
Alpha: species level, diversity within a community
Beta: community level, diversity among communities within
landscape
Gamma: landscape level, diversity among landscapes
Omega: diversity within taxa, phylogenetic diversity
Global: diversity across planet Earth
A C
B D
Diversity (Richness)
Global count 9,484 sp.
3,255 South America
1,860 Colombia
1,780 Peru
1,750 Brazil
1,600 Ecuador
2,900 Asia
2,300 Africa
2,000 North America (from Panama
north + Caribbean)
1,070 Mexico and N. Central America
925 United States
632 Texas
1,700 Australia + surrounding islands
1,000 Europe
65 Antarctica
Hotspots for global avian diversity (Conservation International 2004)
Bird richness is centered in the tropics. Why?
Numbers of U. S.
breeding birds per
400 sq. mi.
Species richness decreases with increasing latitude.
Species richness ultimately depends on whatever proximate factors are found to
affect processes of speciation, extinction, immigration, and emigration.
The hypothesis of effective evolutionary time (most popular)
Assumes that diversity is determined by:
• the evolutionary time under which ecosystems have existed under relatively
unchanged conditions, and
• evolutionary speed directly determined by effects of environmental energy
(temperature) on mutation rates, generation times, and speed of selection
It differs from most other hypotheses in not postulating an upper limit to species
richness set by various abiotic and biotic factors, i.e., it assumes a largely
non-saturated niche space. It does accept that many other factors may also play
a role in determining latitudinal gradients in species richness. The hypothesis is
supported by much recent evidence.
Latitudinal gradients in species diversity (richness).
Although many of the hypotheses exploring the latitudinal diversity gradient are
closely related and interdependent, most of the major hypotheses can be split into
four general categories: 1) spatial/area, 2) energy/climatic, 3) evolutionary/historical,
and 4) biotic.
The 7,520 bird species were ranked from the most basal to the most derived
(resolved to family), and the approximate 35% and 65% percentiles were
selected: 2,700 species from 54 basal families and 2,458 species from 16
derived families. Species richness was then calculated separately for each
group.
From: Climate, niche conservatism, and the global bird diversity gradient
BA Hawkins, JAF Diniz-Filho, CA Jaramillo, SA … - American Naturalist, 2007
Families of birds
having ‗older‘
evolutionary origin
Families of birds
having ‗newer‘
evolutionary origin
How many classes of vertebrates are there?
1. Fish
2. Amphibians
3. Reptiles
4. Birds
5. Mammals
In a Class by themselves??
• Birds diversified from reptilian ancestors
• Birds are the lone surviving remnants of the dinosaurs.
Archaeopteryx
Pygostylia
Confuciusornithidae
Ornithothoraces
Enantiornithes
Hesperornithiformes
Neornithes
Ornithurae
Bird Phylogeny,
simplified after Chiappe (2007)
(Modern Birds)
AVES
Neornithes
Paleognathae (ancient jaw, actually the bony
palate): Struthioniformes, Tinamiformes
Galloanserae:
Anseriformes, Galliformes
Neognathae
(modern jaw,
palate)
Neoaves:
other modern orders
Modern Bird Radiation (based on Sibley and Monroe 1990)
Subclass Neornithes
Paleognathae:
Struthioniformes—ostriches, emus,
kiwis, and allies
Tinamiformes—tinamous
Neognathae:
Anseriformes—waterfowl
Galliformes—fowl
Charadriiformes—gulls, button-quails,
plovers and allies
Gaviiformes—loons
Podicipediformes—grebes
Procellariiformes—albatrosses, petrels,
and allies
Sphenisciformes—penguins
Pelecaniformes—pelicans and allies
Phaethontiformes—tropicbirds
Ciconiiformes—storks and allies
Cathartiformes (?) —New World vultures
Phoenicopteriformes—flamingos
Falconiformes—falcons, eagles, hawks
and allies
Gruiformes—cranes and allies
Pteroclidiformes—sandgrouse
Columbiformes—doves and pigeons
Psittaciformes—parrots and allies
Cuculiformes—cuckoos and turacos
Opisthocomiformes—hoatzin
Strigiformes—owls
Caprimulgiformes—nightjars and allies
Apodiformes—swifts and hummingbirds
Coraciiformes—kingfishers and allies
Piciformes—woodpeckers and allies
Trogoniformes—trogons
Coliiformes—mousebirds
Passeriformes—passerines
Modern Bird Orders
Behavior
Activity:
• diurnal, active by day
• nocturnal, active by night (many owls)
• crepuscular (active during twilight hours),
• by environmental conditions (e.g., coastal waders feed when the
tides are appropriate, by day or night)
Feeding adaptations (bill morphology)
Feeding
• Birds' diets are extremely variable: nectar, fruit, plants, seeds, carrion, and
various small animals, including other birds.
• Because birds have no teeth, their digestive system is adapted to process
unmasticated food items that are swallowed whole.
• Birds can be generalists, or specialists.
• Feeding strategies vary by species.
Gleaners: search foliage or
other plant material for
insects, invertebrates, fruit,
or seeds.
Buff-fronted Foliage-gleaner
Nectar feeders: hummingbirds,
sunbirds, lories, and lorikeets among
others have specially adapted brushy
tongues and in many cases bills designed
to fit co-adapted flowers.
Rufous Hummingbird
Probers: Kiwis and shorebirds
with long bills probe for
invertebrates; shorebirds' varied
bill lengths and feeding methods
result in the separation of
ecological niches.
Filter feeders: flamingos, three species of small
petrels, and some ducks.
Grazers: geese and dabbling ducks.
Kleptoparasitism: Some species, including
frigatebirds, gulls, and skuas, engage in, stealing
food items from other birds. Kleptoparasitism is
thought to be a supplement to food obtained by
hunting, rather than a significant part of any species'
diet; a study of Great Frigatebirds stealing from
Masked Boobies estimated that the frigatebirds stole
at most 40% of their food and on average stole only
5%.
Barnacle Geese grazing
Great Frigatebirds chasing Red-footed Boobies
Hawking: suddenly attacking from a branch (often for insects).
Predators: Loons, diving ducks, penguins and auks pursue their prey
underwater, using their wings or feet for propulsion, while aerial predators
such as sulids, brown pelican, kingfishers and terns plunge dive after their
prey.
Scavengers: vultures, are obligatory carrion eaters; while others, like
gulls, certain raptors (eagles, caracaras, buteos), corvids, are opportunists.
Common Loon
Peregrine Falcon
Migration
Regular seasonal (annual) movements.
• Latitudinal or altitudinal.
• Irregular movements are termed nomadism, invasions or irruptions.
• Non-migratory are known as resident birds.
• Largely in response to changes in food availability, habitat or weather.
• Primary advantage is energetic, even though there is high risk of predation,
exhaustion, and other stress.
• Usually triggered by daylength and climate.
Sandhill Cranes
• The longer days of the northern summer provide greater opportunities for
breeding birds to feed their young. The extended daylight hours allow diurnal
birds to produce larger clutches than related non-migratory species that remain
in the tropics year-round. As the days shorten in autumn, the birds return to
warmer regions where the available food supply varies little with the season.
• Before migration, birds substantially increase body fats and reserves and
reduce the size of some of their organs.
http://www.birdnature.com/allflyways.html
http://shop.nationalgeographic.com/product/308/3800/173.html
Bird Migration in the Americas
Thematic Map (National Geographic
classic).
67 types of birds that migrate are shown on
a map of the Americas that is overlaid with
pathways that show migration routes from
nesting grounds to wintering areas.
Migration record holders:
Sooty Shearwaters: nest in New Zealand and Chile and spend the northern
summer feeding in the North Pacific off Japan, Alaska and California, an annual
round trip of 64,000 km (39,800 mi). Longest animal migration ever recorded
electronically.
Arctic Tern (now) has the second longest-distance migration of any bird, and
sees more daylight than any other, moving from its Arctic breeding grounds to
the Antarctic non-breeding areas.
One Arctic Tern, banded as a chick on the Farne Islands off the British east
coast, reached Melbourne, Australia in just three months from fledging, a sea
journey of over 22,000 km (14,000 miles).
Arctic Tern
Bar-tailed Godwits: longest known non-stop migration of any animal
species, up to 10,200 km (6,300 mi) from Yellow Sea in China to New Zealand.
Bar-tailed Godwit (―E7‖) flies longest nonstop
distance known for any land bird…
• Journey of 18,000-miles, round-trip….
• A series of flights was tracked by satellite, including the longest non-stop
flight recorded for a land bird.
• The U.S. Geological Survey's Alaska Science Center tracked the bird as
part of an ongoing collaborative effort with colleagues in California and New Zealand.
• The scientists were hoping to better understand potential transmission of avian influenza by migratory birds.
• The bird, dubbed "E7" after the tag on its upper leg, was captured along with 15 other godwits in New Zealand in
early February 2007. There each bird was fitted with a small, battery-powered satellite transmitter.
• On March 17, New Zealand to Yalu Jiang, China -- 6,300-miles in eight days.
• Then a 5-week-long layover before departing for the breeding grounds.
• On May 1, to her nesting area on the Yukon-Kuskokwim River Delta in western Alaska. This flight was non-stop, --
4,500 miles in five days.
• Then tracked to the coast of the Yukon Delta where she joined other godwits preparing for their return flight to
New Zealand.
• On August 29, went southeast back across the Alaska Peninsula, over the vast North Pacific and towards the
Hawaiian Islands. When less than a day's flight from the main Hawaiian Islands, she turned southwest, crossing
the Hawaiian Archipelago over open ocean 125 miles west of Kauai, heading towards Fiji. She crossed the
dateline about 300 miles north-northeast of Fiji, and then appeared to fly directly over or slightly west of Fiji,
continuing south towards New Zealand.
• On September 7th she made landfall at the mouth of a small river, eight miles east of where she had been
captured seven months earlier.
• This last leg entailed a non-stop flight of more than eight days and a distance of 7,200 miles, the equivalent of
making a roundtrip flight between New York and San Francisco, and then flying back again to San Francisco
without ever touching down.
• Since they are land birds, godwits like E7 can't stop to eat or drink while flying over open-ocean. The constant
flight speeds at which E7 was tracked by satellite indicate that she did not stop on land.
• Godwits do not become adults until their 3rd or 4th year and many live beyond 20 years of age. If 18,000 miles is
an average annual flight distance, then an adult godwit would fly some 288,000 miles in a lifetime.
• The study that recorded E7's epic flight is a collaborative effort led jointly by USGS and Point Reyes Conservation
Science, with cooperators from Massey University and Miranda Shorebird Centre, New Zealand, and The Global
Flyway Network. The project is funded by the David and Lucile Packard Foundation, the USGS, Alaska Science
Center, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
Bar-tailed Godwit (―E7‖) flies record 18,000 miles (28,500 km)
Species Miles
Breeding
Range Wintering Range
Black-capped Vireo 400-1,250 Oklahoma, Texas w Mexico
Painted Bunting 300-3,000 s and se U.S. Mexico to Panama, West Indies
Northern Parula 300-3,000 se Canada, e U.S. Florida, West Indies, Mexico to Nicaragua
Wood Thrush 600-3,750 se Canada, e U.S. Mexico to Panama
Scarlet Tanager 600-4,350 se Canada, e U.S. nw South America
Cerulean Warbler
2,175-
4,500 se Canada, e U.S. nw South America
Blackpoll Warbler
2,500-
5,000
Alaska, Canada, New
England n South America
Purple Martin 600-6,000
s Canada, U.S.,
Mexico Brazil, Bolivia to n Argentina
Cliff Swallow
1,250-
6,800
Alaska, Canada,
U.S., n Mexico s Brazil, Bolivia to c Argentina
Common Nighthawk
2,500-
6,800
most of Canada and
U.S. Colombia to c Argentina
Swainson's Hawk
3,750-
7,500 sw Canada, w U.S. s Brazil to c Argentina
Red Knot
1,500-
10,000 n Canada
coasts from c U.S. to southern tip of South
America
Other U. S. migrants: examples (one-way distances)
“One-eyed Willie” migrated with only one eye…
Adult male banded 1996 at Dolan Falls Preserve (TNC),
Val Verde County, TX. Bred successfully.
Not seen in 1997, but recaptured 1998. Left eye severely damaged,
eye socket healed over.
0 200 400 600 800 1,000
Kilometers
®
Breeding
Potential Mexico breeding
Nonbreeding
HOW DO THEY DO THIS? Birds navigate during migration using a
variety of methods.
• For diurnal migrants, the sun is used to navigate by day, and a stellar
compass is used at night. Birds that use the sun compensate for the
changing position of the sun during the day by the use of an internal clock.
• Nocturnal migrants orient with a stellar ―compass‖ which depends on the
position of the constellations surrounding the North Star. These are backed
up in some species by their ability to sense the Earth's geomagnetism
through specialized photoreceptors.
• Recent research suggests migratory birds may also use two electromagnetic
tools to find their destinations: one that is entirely innate and another that
relies on experience.
• A young bird on its first migration flies in the correct direction according to the
Earth's magnetic field, but does not know how far the journey will be. It does
this through a radical pair mechanism whereby chemical reactions in special
photo pigments sensitive to long wavelengths are affected by the field.
• Birds probably also use mental maps of topography and landmarks.
Good internet source for US bird migration:
http://www.npwrc.usgs.gov/resource/birds/migratio/routes.htm
Note that although this only works during daylight hours, it does not use the
position of the sun in any way. At this stage the bird is similar to a boy scout
with a compass but no map, until it grows accustomed to the journey and can
put its other facilities to use.
With experience they learn various landmarks and this "mapping" is done by
magnetites in the trigeminal nerve system, which tell the bird how strong the
field is. Because birds migrate between northern and southern regions, the
magnetic field strengths at different latitudes let it know when it has reached its
destination.
More recent research has found a neural connection between the eye and
"Cluster N", the part of the forebrain that is active during migrational orientation,
suggesting that birds may actually be able to see the magnetic field of the earth.
Conservation – economic value
National Survey of Fishing, Hunting, and Wildlife-Associated Recreation
(USFWS 2006) – update to TPWD handout.
• Fishing $3.2 billion in expenditures, 2.5 million anglers
• Hunting: $2.3 billion in expenditures, 1.1 million hunters
• Wildlife Watching: $2.9 billion in expenditures, 3.7 million participants
A Characterization of Ecotourism in the Texas Lower Rio Grande
Valley (Houston Advanced Research Center, 2004)
• The Texas State Comptroller‘s Office recently estimated nature tourism
to comprise between $25.4 billion -- $39.9 billion!
• Nature tourism generates approximately $1 billion in state taxes, $739
million in local taxes, and $1.4 billion of economic activity.
Arctic
Northern Forest
Pacific
Intermountain West
Southwest
Prairie
Eastern
Partners In Flight Avifaunal Biomes
BCRs 20, 33-36
PIF Southwest Avifaunal Biomes
Breeding
Wintering
Few
Many
Few
Many
Have the greatest
diversity of all….
Texas‘ Federally listed birds: Status
• Eastern Brown Pelican E
• Whooping Crane E
• Piping Plover E
• Interior Least Tern E
• Eskimo Curlew E
• Greater Prairie Chicken (Attwater‘s) E
• Northern Aplomado Falcon E
• Red-cockaded Woodpecker E
• Ivory-billed Woodpecker E
• Southwestern Willow Flycatcher E
• Black-capped Vireo E*
• Golden-cheeked Warbler E
Texas‘ candidate species birds:
Lesser Prairie Chicken
Yellow-billed Cuckoo
(western ssp.)
Action Category Texas SW Biome %
Immediate Action 7 11 64
Management 15 21 71
Long-term Planning &
Responsibility 12 26 46
Totals 34 58 59
Partners In Flight Species of Continental Importance
in the Southwest Avifaunal Biome
(Table 6; PIF North American Landbird Conservation Plan)
Texas Wildlife Action Plan (TWAP)
BIRDS -- The Texas Priority Species List
Imperiled, declining, or vulnerable….192
Official Texas Bird List (2 Jan 08)…..632
Percent TWAP Priority Birds.....………30%
Ornithology-Basic-Concepts.pdf..........
Partners In Flight
Bird Conservation Regions
Oaks and Prairies BCR
The Oaks and Prairies extend from approximately the Red River of Oklahoma
south to San Antonio, Texas, east to the acidic sandy soils of the East Texas
Pineywoods and west to the Eastern Cross Timbers.
Within this area, the Texas Blackland Prairie represents the southernmost
extension of the North American tallgrass prairie.
• principal habitat is tallgrass; typically occurs on higher areas with good
drainage.
• eleven plant associations have been described in the Blackland Prairie, and
dominant vegetation includes big bluestem, little bluestem, Indiangrass,
switchgrass, brownseed paspalum, and gramagrass.
• also present are bottomland hardwood forests, dominated by burr oak,
Shumard oak, black walnut, American elm, cedar elm, and white ash.
• riparian forests include cottonwood, sycamore, black willow, and green ash.
• common trees of upland hardwood forests occurring on the upper slopes and
summits of Austin chalk escarpments include Texas oak, San Saba oak,
Mexican plum, and cedar elm.
• often an associated dense shrub layer within these forests, including species
such as aromatic sumac, poison oak, Carolina buckthorn, and coralberry.
• occasional wetlands and freshwater marshes in the Oaks and Prairies area,
primarily associated with the peripheral areas of streams, rivers, and
reservoirs.
Oaks and Prairies (PIF) conservation recommendations and needs –
• most heavily altered habitat in the Oaks and Prairies physiographic area is
tallgrass prairie. Over 99% of the Blackland Prairie has been plowed for crop
production, mostly cotton, and only one tenth of one percent of original prairie
exists.
• small fragments of tallgrass species are kept in small ―hay meadows‖ to insure
that livestock will have adequate forage even during drought years. The
continued loss of tallgrass habitat (at the rate of 20% per year) depletes the
inventory of potential local models for restoration projects, and reduces the
genetic materials needed to sustain the prairie system.
• areas remaining should be incorporated into some type of preserve system to
preserve this vital habitat.
• community based restoration projects would serve to both educate the public
and preserve the resource.
• declines in grasslands are also due, in part, to lack of management. In the
absence of fire management or appropriate rotational grazing, grasslands were
replaced with heavy woody growth and/or exotic species. Appropriate fire
management and grazing through private lands incentive programs are needed.
• there is good evidence in grasslands that the introduction of imported fire ants is
limiting reproductive success of some birds. More research is needed to
quantify this impact.
Priority Bird Populations and Habitats for Oaks
and Prairies BCR
Grasslands/scrub habitats:
• Greater Prairie-Chicken (Attwater's subspecies)
• Bewick's Wren (Eastern subspecies, winter only)
• Scissor-tailed Flycatcher
• Painted Bunting
• Bell's Vireo
• Northern Bobwhite
Go to Grassland Birds presentation….
Ornithology-Basic-Concepts.pdf..........

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Ornithology-Basic-Concepts.pdf..........

  • 1. Ornithology: an introduction to basic concepts Dr. C. Craig Farquhar Wildlife Division Texas Parks and Wildlife Department Austin, Texas 78744 craig.farquhar@tpwd.state.tx.us (512) 389-4933 Breeding Few Many
  • 2. American Kestrel (Falco sparverius) Black-capped Vireo (Vireo atricapilla) Variable Hawk (Buteo polyosoma) White-tailed Hawk (Buteo albicaudatus)
  • 3. Goals for this workshop: • Bird diversity • Behavioral characteristics • Migration • Conservation Prothonotary Warbler feeding Brown-headed Cowbird chick
  • 4. Birds (class Aves) have many traits: intelligent, bipedal, warm-blooded, vertebrate animals that lay eggs. There are around 10,000 living species, making them the most numerous tetrapod vertebrates. • inhabit ecosystems across the globe, from the Arctic to the Antarctic. • range in size from the 5 cm (2 in) Bee Hummingbird to the 2.7 m (9 ft) Ostrich. • evolved from theropod dinosaurs during the Jurassic period, around 150–200 Mya (million years ago), and the earliest known bird is the Late Jurassic Archaeopteryx, c 155–150 Ma. • characterized by feathers, a beak with no teeth, the laying of hard-shelled eggs, a high metabolic rate, a four-chambered heart, and a lightweight but strong skeleton. • have forelimbs modified as wings and most can fly, with some exceptions including ratites, penguins, and a number of diverse endemic island species. • have unique digestive and respiratory systems that are highly adapted for flight. • many species undertake long distance annual migrations, and many more perform shorter irregular movements.
  • 5. Sizes of North American birds Calliope Hummingbird California Condor
  • 6. Birds are resourceful, especially corvids and parrots (e.g., Alex): among the most intelligent animal species. Some make and use tools, and many social species exhibit cultural transmission of knowledge across generations. Woodpecker Finch uses sticks Brown-headed Nuthatch uses bark to pry under other bark. Lammergeier drops bones onto rocks To break them up.
  • 7. Bowerbirds construct elaborate nests to attract females. Great Bowerbirds (Chlamydera nuchalis)
  • 8. ALEX, the African Grey Parrot Alex African Grey Parrot (1976 – 6 Sep 2007). Dr. Irene Pepperberg, listed Alex's accomplishments in 1999: • could identify fifty different objects and recognize quantities up to six; • could distinguish seven colors and five shapes, and understand the concepts of "bigger", "smaller", "same", and "different," and • was learning "over" and "under;‖ • had a vocabulary of about 150 words, but was exceptional in that he appeared to have understanding of what he said. For example, when Alex was shown an object and was asked about its shape, color, or material, he could label it correctly. If asked the difference between two objects, he also answered that, but if there was no difference between the objects, he said ―none.‖
  • 9. • When he was tired of being tested, he would say ―I‘m gonna go away,‖ and if the researcher displayed annoyance, Alex tried to defuse it with the phrase, ―I‘m sorry.‖ • If he said ―Wanna banana‖, but was offered a nut instead, he stared in silence, asked for the banana again, or took the nut and threw it at the researcher. • When asked questions in the context of research testing, he gave the correct answer approximately 80 percent of the time. In July 2005, Pepperberg reported that he understood concept of zero. • Although truly amazing accomplishments, there were skeptics in the scientific community. Some raised the issue of Operant Conditioning (reinforcement and punishment), whereby Alex would have been responding to subtle cues rather than thinking on his own. • Alex died unexpectedly, age 31, on 7 Sep 2007, apparently related to atherosclerosis (‗hardening of the arteries‘). • See more on this amazing bird at: http://www.alexfoundation.org/
  • 10. Many birds are social. • communicate using visual signals and through calls and songs, • participate in social behaviors including cooperative breeding and hunting (Harris‘s Hawk), flocking (blackbirds, starlings), and mobbing of predators (many passerines). • vast majority of bird species are socially monogamous, usually for one breeding season at a time (―serial monogamy‖), sometimes for years, but rarely for life. • other species have breeding systems that are polygynous ("many females,― grouse, manakins, some hummingbirds, some blackbirds) or, rarely, polyandrous ("many males,― Galapagos Hawk, some phalaropes, some shorebirds). • eggs are usually laid in a nest and incubated by the parents. Most birds have an extended period of parental care after hatching. • precocial: leave nest at an early age, young tend to have bigger brains • altricial: remain in nest for extended periods, brains are smaller but continue to grow, outgrowing precocial birds at maturity and, hence, have a wider skill set than precocial birds.
  • 11. Many bird species are of economic importance: • mostly as sources of food acquired through hunting or farming; • some species, particularly songbirds and parrots, are popular as pets. • other uses include the harvesting of guano (droppings) for use as a fertilizer. • birds figure prominently in all aspects of human culture from religion to poetry to popular music. • very popular sources of local economic welfare, especially in the Lower Rio Grande Valley: • The Texas State Comptroller‘s Office recently estimated nature tourism to comprise between $25.4 billion -- $39.9 billion! • Nature tourism generates approximately $1 billion in state taxes, $739 million in local taxes, and $1.4 billion of economic activity. • Alas, about 120–130 species have become extinct as a result of human activity since the 17th century, and hundreds more before then. Currently about 1,200 species of birds worldwide are threatened with extinction by human activities, though efforts are underway to protect them.
  • 12. What is diversity? • Biological diversity can take many forms. • Diversity typically refers to number of species (richness) in a community. • However, a more accurate representation of biological importance takes into account number of individuals (evenness or abundance). Alpha: species level, diversity within a community Beta: community level, diversity among communities within landscape Gamma: landscape level, diversity among landscapes Omega: diversity within taxa, phylogenetic diversity Global: diversity across planet Earth
  • 14. Diversity (Richness) Global count 9,484 sp. 3,255 South America 1,860 Colombia 1,780 Peru 1,750 Brazil 1,600 Ecuador 2,900 Asia 2,300 Africa 2,000 North America (from Panama north + Caribbean) 1,070 Mexico and N. Central America 925 United States 632 Texas 1,700 Australia + surrounding islands 1,000 Europe 65 Antarctica
  • 15. Hotspots for global avian diversity (Conservation International 2004)
  • 16. Bird richness is centered in the tropics. Why?
  • 17. Numbers of U. S. breeding birds per 400 sq. mi. Species richness decreases with increasing latitude.
  • 18. Species richness ultimately depends on whatever proximate factors are found to affect processes of speciation, extinction, immigration, and emigration. The hypothesis of effective evolutionary time (most popular) Assumes that diversity is determined by: • the evolutionary time under which ecosystems have existed under relatively unchanged conditions, and • evolutionary speed directly determined by effects of environmental energy (temperature) on mutation rates, generation times, and speed of selection It differs from most other hypotheses in not postulating an upper limit to species richness set by various abiotic and biotic factors, i.e., it assumes a largely non-saturated niche space. It does accept that many other factors may also play a role in determining latitudinal gradients in species richness. The hypothesis is supported by much recent evidence. Latitudinal gradients in species diversity (richness). Although many of the hypotheses exploring the latitudinal diversity gradient are closely related and interdependent, most of the major hypotheses can be split into four general categories: 1) spatial/area, 2) energy/climatic, 3) evolutionary/historical, and 4) biotic.
  • 19. The 7,520 bird species were ranked from the most basal to the most derived (resolved to family), and the approximate 35% and 65% percentiles were selected: 2,700 species from 54 basal families and 2,458 species from 16 derived families. Species richness was then calculated separately for each group. From: Climate, niche conservatism, and the global bird diversity gradient BA Hawkins, JAF Diniz-Filho, CA Jaramillo, SA … - American Naturalist, 2007
  • 20. Families of birds having ‗older‘ evolutionary origin Families of birds having ‗newer‘ evolutionary origin
  • 21. How many classes of vertebrates are there? 1. Fish 2. Amphibians 3. Reptiles 4. Birds 5. Mammals In a Class by themselves??
  • 22. • Birds diversified from reptilian ancestors • Birds are the lone surviving remnants of the dinosaurs.
  • 24. Neornithes Paleognathae (ancient jaw, actually the bony palate): Struthioniformes, Tinamiformes Galloanserae: Anseriformes, Galliformes Neognathae (modern jaw, palate) Neoaves: other modern orders Modern Bird Radiation (based on Sibley and Monroe 1990)
  • 25. Subclass Neornithes Paleognathae: Struthioniformes—ostriches, emus, kiwis, and allies Tinamiformes—tinamous Neognathae: Anseriformes—waterfowl Galliformes—fowl Charadriiformes—gulls, button-quails, plovers and allies Gaviiformes—loons Podicipediformes—grebes Procellariiformes—albatrosses, petrels, and allies Sphenisciformes—penguins Pelecaniformes—pelicans and allies Phaethontiformes—tropicbirds Ciconiiformes—storks and allies Cathartiformes (?) —New World vultures Phoenicopteriformes—flamingos Falconiformes—falcons, eagles, hawks and allies Gruiformes—cranes and allies Pteroclidiformes—sandgrouse Columbiformes—doves and pigeons Psittaciformes—parrots and allies Cuculiformes—cuckoos and turacos Opisthocomiformes—hoatzin Strigiformes—owls Caprimulgiformes—nightjars and allies Apodiformes—swifts and hummingbirds Coraciiformes—kingfishers and allies Piciformes—woodpeckers and allies Trogoniformes—trogons Coliiformes—mousebirds Passeriformes—passerines Modern Bird Orders
  • 26. Behavior Activity: • diurnal, active by day • nocturnal, active by night (many owls) • crepuscular (active during twilight hours), • by environmental conditions (e.g., coastal waders feed when the tides are appropriate, by day or night)
  • 28. Feeding • Birds' diets are extremely variable: nectar, fruit, plants, seeds, carrion, and various small animals, including other birds. • Because birds have no teeth, their digestive system is adapted to process unmasticated food items that are swallowed whole. • Birds can be generalists, or specialists. • Feeding strategies vary by species. Gleaners: search foliage or other plant material for insects, invertebrates, fruit, or seeds. Buff-fronted Foliage-gleaner
  • 29. Nectar feeders: hummingbirds, sunbirds, lories, and lorikeets among others have specially adapted brushy tongues and in many cases bills designed to fit co-adapted flowers. Rufous Hummingbird Probers: Kiwis and shorebirds with long bills probe for invertebrates; shorebirds' varied bill lengths and feeding methods result in the separation of ecological niches.
  • 30. Filter feeders: flamingos, three species of small petrels, and some ducks. Grazers: geese and dabbling ducks. Kleptoparasitism: Some species, including frigatebirds, gulls, and skuas, engage in, stealing food items from other birds. Kleptoparasitism is thought to be a supplement to food obtained by hunting, rather than a significant part of any species' diet; a study of Great Frigatebirds stealing from Masked Boobies estimated that the frigatebirds stole at most 40% of their food and on average stole only 5%. Barnacle Geese grazing Great Frigatebirds chasing Red-footed Boobies
  • 31. Hawking: suddenly attacking from a branch (often for insects). Predators: Loons, diving ducks, penguins and auks pursue their prey underwater, using their wings or feet for propulsion, while aerial predators such as sulids, brown pelican, kingfishers and terns plunge dive after their prey. Scavengers: vultures, are obligatory carrion eaters; while others, like gulls, certain raptors (eagles, caracaras, buteos), corvids, are opportunists. Common Loon Peregrine Falcon
  • 32. Migration Regular seasonal (annual) movements. • Latitudinal or altitudinal. • Irregular movements are termed nomadism, invasions or irruptions. • Non-migratory are known as resident birds. • Largely in response to changes in food availability, habitat or weather. • Primary advantage is energetic, even though there is high risk of predation, exhaustion, and other stress. • Usually triggered by daylength and climate. Sandhill Cranes • The longer days of the northern summer provide greater opportunities for breeding birds to feed their young. The extended daylight hours allow diurnal birds to produce larger clutches than related non-migratory species that remain in the tropics year-round. As the days shorten in autumn, the birds return to warmer regions where the available food supply varies little with the season. • Before migration, birds substantially increase body fats and reserves and reduce the size of some of their organs.
  • 34. http://shop.nationalgeographic.com/product/308/3800/173.html Bird Migration in the Americas Thematic Map (National Geographic classic). 67 types of birds that migrate are shown on a map of the Americas that is overlaid with pathways that show migration routes from nesting grounds to wintering areas.
  • 35. Migration record holders: Sooty Shearwaters: nest in New Zealand and Chile and spend the northern summer feeding in the North Pacific off Japan, Alaska and California, an annual round trip of 64,000 km (39,800 mi). Longest animal migration ever recorded electronically.
  • 36. Arctic Tern (now) has the second longest-distance migration of any bird, and sees more daylight than any other, moving from its Arctic breeding grounds to the Antarctic non-breeding areas. One Arctic Tern, banded as a chick on the Farne Islands off the British east coast, reached Melbourne, Australia in just three months from fledging, a sea journey of over 22,000 km (14,000 miles). Arctic Tern
  • 37. Bar-tailed Godwits: longest known non-stop migration of any animal species, up to 10,200 km (6,300 mi) from Yellow Sea in China to New Zealand.
  • 38. Bar-tailed Godwit (―E7‖) flies longest nonstop distance known for any land bird… • Journey of 18,000-miles, round-trip…. • A series of flights was tracked by satellite, including the longest non-stop flight recorded for a land bird. • The U.S. Geological Survey's Alaska Science Center tracked the bird as part of an ongoing collaborative effort with colleagues in California and New Zealand. • The scientists were hoping to better understand potential transmission of avian influenza by migratory birds. • The bird, dubbed "E7" after the tag on its upper leg, was captured along with 15 other godwits in New Zealand in early February 2007. There each bird was fitted with a small, battery-powered satellite transmitter. • On March 17, New Zealand to Yalu Jiang, China -- 6,300-miles in eight days. • Then a 5-week-long layover before departing for the breeding grounds. • On May 1, to her nesting area on the Yukon-Kuskokwim River Delta in western Alaska. This flight was non-stop, -- 4,500 miles in five days. • Then tracked to the coast of the Yukon Delta where she joined other godwits preparing for their return flight to New Zealand. • On August 29, went southeast back across the Alaska Peninsula, over the vast North Pacific and towards the Hawaiian Islands. When less than a day's flight from the main Hawaiian Islands, she turned southwest, crossing the Hawaiian Archipelago over open ocean 125 miles west of Kauai, heading towards Fiji. She crossed the dateline about 300 miles north-northeast of Fiji, and then appeared to fly directly over or slightly west of Fiji, continuing south towards New Zealand. • On September 7th she made landfall at the mouth of a small river, eight miles east of where she had been captured seven months earlier. • This last leg entailed a non-stop flight of more than eight days and a distance of 7,200 miles, the equivalent of making a roundtrip flight between New York and San Francisco, and then flying back again to San Francisco without ever touching down. • Since they are land birds, godwits like E7 can't stop to eat or drink while flying over open-ocean. The constant flight speeds at which E7 was tracked by satellite indicate that she did not stop on land. • Godwits do not become adults until their 3rd or 4th year and many live beyond 20 years of age. If 18,000 miles is an average annual flight distance, then an adult godwit would fly some 288,000 miles in a lifetime. • The study that recorded E7's epic flight is a collaborative effort led jointly by USGS and Point Reyes Conservation Science, with cooperators from Massey University and Miranda Shorebird Centre, New Zealand, and The Global Flyway Network. The project is funded by the David and Lucile Packard Foundation, the USGS, Alaska Science Center, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
  • 39. Bar-tailed Godwit (―E7‖) flies record 18,000 miles (28,500 km)
  • 40. Species Miles Breeding Range Wintering Range Black-capped Vireo 400-1,250 Oklahoma, Texas w Mexico Painted Bunting 300-3,000 s and se U.S. Mexico to Panama, West Indies Northern Parula 300-3,000 se Canada, e U.S. Florida, West Indies, Mexico to Nicaragua Wood Thrush 600-3,750 se Canada, e U.S. Mexico to Panama Scarlet Tanager 600-4,350 se Canada, e U.S. nw South America Cerulean Warbler 2,175- 4,500 se Canada, e U.S. nw South America Blackpoll Warbler 2,500- 5,000 Alaska, Canada, New England n South America Purple Martin 600-6,000 s Canada, U.S., Mexico Brazil, Bolivia to n Argentina Cliff Swallow 1,250- 6,800 Alaska, Canada, U.S., n Mexico s Brazil, Bolivia to c Argentina Common Nighthawk 2,500- 6,800 most of Canada and U.S. Colombia to c Argentina Swainson's Hawk 3,750- 7,500 sw Canada, w U.S. s Brazil to c Argentina Red Knot 1,500- 10,000 n Canada coasts from c U.S. to southern tip of South America Other U. S. migrants: examples (one-way distances)
  • 41. “One-eyed Willie” migrated with only one eye… Adult male banded 1996 at Dolan Falls Preserve (TNC), Val Verde County, TX. Bred successfully. Not seen in 1997, but recaptured 1998. Left eye severely damaged, eye socket healed over. 0 200 400 600 800 1,000 Kilometers ® Breeding Potential Mexico breeding Nonbreeding
  • 42. HOW DO THEY DO THIS? Birds navigate during migration using a variety of methods. • For diurnal migrants, the sun is used to navigate by day, and a stellar compass is used at night. Birds that use the sun compensate for the changing position of the sun during the day by the use of an internal clock. • Nocturnal migrants orient with a stellar ―compass‖ which depends on the position of the constellations surrounding the North Star. These are backed up in some species by their ability to sense the Earth's geomagnetism through specialized photoreceptors. • Recent research suggests migratory birds may also use two electromagnetic tools to find their destinations: one that is entirely innate and another that relies on experience. • A young bird on its first migration flies in the correct direction according to the Earth's magnetic field, but does not know how far the journey will be. It does this through a radical pair mechanism whereby chemical reactions in special photo pigments sensitive to long wavelengths are affected by the field. • Birds probably also use mental maps of topography and landmarks.
  • 43. Good internet source for US bird migration: http://www.npwrc.usgs.gov/resource/birds/migratio/routes.htm Note that although this only works during daylight hours, it does not use the position of the sun in any way. At this stage the bird is similar to a boy scout with a compass but no map, until it grows accustomed to the journey and can put its other facilities to use. With experience they learn various landmarks and this "mapping" is done by magnetites in the trigeminal nerve system, which tell the bird how strong the field is. Because birds migrate between northern and southern regions, the magnetic field strengths at different latitudes let it know when it has reached its destination. More recent research has found a neural connection between the eye and "Cluster N", the part of the forebrain that is active during migrational orientation, suggesting that birds may actually be able to see the magnetic field of the earth.
  • 44. Conservation – economic value National Survey of Fishing, Hunting, and Wildlife-Associated Recreation (USFWS 2006) – update to TPWD handout. • Fishing $3.2 billion in expenditures, 2.5 million anglers • Hunting: $2.3 billion in expenditures, 1.1 million hunters • Wildlife Watching: $2.9 billion in expenditures, 3.7 million participants A Characterization of Ecotourism in the Texas Lower Rio Grande Valley (Houston Advanced Research Center, 2004) • The Texas State Comptroller‘s Office recently estimated nature tourism to comprise between $25.4 billion -- $39.9 billion! • Nature tourism generates approximately $1 billion in state taxes, $739 million in local taxes, and $1.4 billion of economic activity.
  • 46. PIF Southwest Avifaunal Biomes Breeding Wintering Few Many Few Many Have the greatest diversity of all….
  • 47. Texas‘ Federally listed birds: Status • Eastern Brown Pelican E • Whooping Crane E • Piping Plover E • Interior Least Tern E • Eskimo Curlew E • Greater Prairie Chicken (Attwater‘s) E • Northern Aplomado Falcon E • Red-cockaded Woodpecker E • Ivory-billed Woodpecker E • Southwestern Willow Flycatcher E • Black-capped Vireo E* • Golden-cheeked Warbler E
  • 48. Texas‘ candidate species birds: Lesser Prairie Chicken Yellow-billed Cuckoo (western ssp.)
  • 49. Action Category Texas SW Biome % Immediate Action 7 11 64 Management 15 21 71 Long-term Planning & Responsibility 12 26 46 Totals 34 58 59 Partners In Flight Species of Continental Importance in the Southwest Avifaunal Biome (Table 6; PIF North American Landbird Conservation Plan)
  • 50. Texas Wildlife Action Plan (TWAP) BIRDS -- The Texas Priority Species List Imperiled, declining, or vulnerable….192 Official Texas Bird List (2 Jan 08)…..632 Percent TWAP Priority Birds.....………30%
  • 52. Partners In Flight Bird Conservation Regions Oaks and Prairies BCR
  • 53. The Oaks and Prairies extend from approximately the Red River of Oklahoma south to San Antonio, Texas, east to the acidic sandy soils of the East Texas Pineywoods and west to the Eastern Cross Timbers. Within this area, the Texas Blackland Prairie represents the southernmost extension of the North American tallgrass prairie. • principal habitat is tallgrass; typically occurs on higher areas with good drainage. • eleven plant associations have been described in the Blackland Prairie, and dominant vegetation includes big bluestem, little bluestem, Indiangrass, switchgrass, brownseed paspalum, and gramagrass. • also present are bottomland hardwood forests, dominated by burr oak, Shumard oak, black walnut, American elm, cedar elm, and white ash. • riparian forests include cottonwood, sycamore, black willow, and green ash. • common trees of upland hardwood forests occurring on the upper slopes and summits of Austin chalk escarpments include Texas oak, San Saba oak, Mexican plum, and cedar elm. • often an associated dense shrub layer within these forests, including species such as aromatic sumac, poison oak, Carolina buckthorn, and coralberry. • occasional wetlands and freshwater marshes in the Oaks and Prairies area, primarily associated with the peripheral areas of streams, rivers, and reservoirs.
  • 54. Oaks and Prairies (PIF) conservation recommendations and needs – • most heavily altered habitat in the Oaks and Prairies physiographic area is tallgrass prairie. Over 99% of the Blackland Prairie has been plowed for crop production, mostly cotton, and only one tenth of one percent of original prairie exists. • small fragments of tallgrass species are kept in small ―hay meadows‖ to insure that livestock will have adequate forage even during drought years. The continued loss of tallgrass habitat (at the rate of 20% per year) depletes the inventory of potential local models for restoration projects, and reduces the genetic materials needed to sustain the prairie system. • areas remaining should be incorporated into some type of preserve system to preserve this vital habitat. • community based restoration projects would serve to both educate the public and preserve the resource. • declines in grasslands are also due, in part, to lack of management. In the absence of fire management or appropriate rotational grazing, grasslands were replaced with heavy woody growth and/or exotic species. Appropriate fire management and grazing through private lands incentive programs are needed. • there is good evidence in grasslands that the introduction of imported fire ants is limiting reproductive success of some birds. More research is needed to quantify this impact.
  • 55. Priority Bird Populations and Habitats for Oaks and Prairies BCR Grasslands/scrub habitats: • Greater Prairie-Chicken (Attwater's subspecies) • Bewick's Wren (Eastern subspecies, winter only) • Scissor-tailed Flycatcher • Painted Bunting • Bell's Vireo • Northern Bobwhite
  • 56. Go to Grassland Birds presentation….