The True Nature of Bird Beaks
01/07/2011

At once the sculptor and the sculpture, a beak can tell a
lot about a bird and its place in the world—as well as ours. In "Pecking Order" (Audubon Magazine, January-February 2011), writer Peter Friederici and photographer Joel Sartore probe the science behind bird beaks.
"Finches with their hefty seed-crackers; warblers with their forceps made slender for extracting small insects hidden among leaves and stems; raptors with their curved hooks for tearing; shorebirds with their probes, straight or curved, which help them extract foods buried on a beach or mudflat. Novice birders quickly learn that the wild diversity of bird beaks is among the most reliable means of quickly determining to what family, and often even what species, a bird belongs. When you’re faced with the bewildering array of avian life in a fall marsh or spring woodlot, that certitude is a comfort, something solid to rest on.
But it’s a bit misleading, too. Birds’ beaks are, in fact, always changing. They’re not static over the course of an individual bird’s lifetime, and they’re certainly not fixed as bird species respond to—and instigate—changes in their environment. Yes, the basic order taught in Birding 101 is there. But scientists have come to learn in recent years that bills are far from being blunt instruments. Rather, they’re delicate barometers of their surroundings. To examine in detail how they work is to be transported from simple satisfaction at the intricacies of efficient natural design to wonderment that evolution can get things so precisely right in so many ways." Read the Full Story.


Comments
I would hate to see birds go
I would hate to see birds go extinct in alaska from some kind of contaminat that can be stopped or prevented
Your blog issue is something
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What tubular eyes can’t do
What tubular eyes can’t do is swivel or rotate in the way a human eye can. Tubular eyes also limit peripheral vision. Therefore, while an owl’s eyes may be larger than the eyes of most birds, its actual field of vision is smaller.
Malboro
very good article! Recently
very good article! Recently I was reading that about 10 percent of Alaskan birds have deformed beaks. Some species upwards to 15% are deformed are deformed.
I wish the Audubon society would check into this problem as the deformed birds can't eat or breed, or raise young.
I would hate to see birds go extinct in Alaska from some kind of contaminate that can be stopped or prevented.
10 percent deformed today is a horrible emergency that needs to be addressed asap!
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This is really a nice to
This is really a nice to read about nature and animal care. I have this topic about birds in my Thesis book during my college years.
I am teaching my niece about
I am teaching my niece about birds and she has a fascination with striking colorful birds.
Very good article! I am
Very good article! I am teaching my kids about the different parts of birds and it is certainly fascinating. I am thankful for the Audubon website.