1 / 17

Birds

Birds. Respiratory System. How do lungs and air sacs work together to obtain oxygen?

bert
Download Presentation

Birds

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Birds

  2. Respiratory System How do lungs and air sacs work together to obtain oxygen? The posterior and anterior air sacs expand during inhalation, half the air enters the trachea the other half enters the posterior sac and passes through the lung’s into the anterior sac. The anterior and posterior sac’s don’t play a direct role in gas exchange, but to store air, & helps lungs to maintain a fixed volume with fresh air constantly flowing through. How is a one-way air flow different then a two-way air flow? One-way air flow is when you inhale and, then exhale. A two-way air flow is when you inhale and at the same time you are inhaling you are exhaling. • Birds have a high oxygen demand. • Trachea- fresh air flows through the lungs in only one direction.

  3. Skeletal Composition • Explain how the bones of a bird are adapted for flight: There wing bones are made very light to make flying easier and their leg bones are heavier then all of there bones to make an easy landing. • Define: Furcula- important for a birds flight, is formed by the fusion of two collar bones. Sternum- Muscles in the chest cause the sternum to be pushed outward. This creates a negative pressure in the air sacs, causing air to enter the respiratory system.

  4. Response/Nervous Central- Brain & spinal cord Peripheral- Cranial & spinal cord, ganglia

  5. http://people.eku.edu/ritchisong/RITCHISO//birdbrain.html

  6. Circulatory System How many chambers does a birds heart have? & why is this a advantage? They have a four chambered heart &, it allows for nutrients and, oxygen transports through the body, providing energy to fly and maintain high levels of activity.

  7. Digestive system What do birds eat? Peanuts, seeds, grains, worms. How do they obtain there food?What special adaptation do they have? For a example think of a humming birds, they have long thin bills which they insert into flowers to get nectar. Birds that eat meat usually have long, sharp, curved bills Which will help them obtain food. Describe these functions- Crop- Softens food, stores food temporarily. Gizzard-Four muscular bands that rotate and crush food. Cloacae- where sperm is stored. Villi – Holds nutrients, is shaped like a mushroom.

  8. Reproduction • Birds have no external sex organs. • After they male and female mate the female lays a number of eggs in a clutch. • They usually lay from one to twenty eggs each batch.

  9. Excretory • Why is bird urine different from humans? The cones of birds are humorous than those of humans. Humans density is 200,000 cones per square milli For a bird it is 400,000 cones per square milli http://www.nhm.org/birds/guide/pg016.html

  10. General Characteristics • Birds only have one kidney. • They have four heart chambers. • Their bones are light weight and usually hollow. • They don’t have a bladder so they don’t have to carry all that extra weight.

  11. Habitat • They usually are in abandoned fields. • Mixed/Coniferous forest. • Desert. • Fresh water marsh.

  12. Number of Species • 10,000 through out the world • Only 925 have been seen • 3,200 in Africa,2,900 in Asia,1,700 in Australia and many more in other countries.

  13. Body structure • Birds have a bilateral body structure.

  14. Bibliography • http;//people.eku.edu/ritchisong/ritchsok3/bird.html • http;//encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia-761552516

More Related