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ESRM 456

ESRM 456 . Biology and Conservation of Birds John Marzluff 123E Anderson 206 616 6883 corvid@u.washington.edu. Course Web Page. Web site http://fsweb.sefs.uw.edu/classes.esrm.456/Syllabus_ESRM456.htm Class email list

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ESRM 456

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  1. ESRM 456 Biology and Conservation of Birds John Marzluff 123E Anderson 206 616 6883 corvid@u.washington.edu

  2. Course Web Page • Web site • http://fsweb.sefs.uw.edu/classes.esrm.456/Syllabus_ESRM456.htm • Class email list • Important to monitor your u. account for announcements related to class notes, etc. • esrm456a_au18@uw.edu

  3. Assignments and Grading • CRITICAL THOUGHT EXERCISES (~100 Points). Throughout the quarter I will provide materials for you to evaluate (e.g., conservation plans, scientific papers, etc) and discuss. Each student will turn in a 1 page summary of their review and discussion. There will be 3-5 assignments worth 20-30 points each. • MIDTERM EXAM (100 Points). My exams include long essay and discussion problems. The midterm will include all material covered up to that point and will be a take-home exam. • FINAL EXAM (DEC 13, 830am, Condon 113; 200 Points). The final exam will be comprehensive. • RESEARCH PAPER (due Nov. 28; 100 Points). You can choose the topic of your choice that involves bird biology or conservation and write a research paper that reviews and synthesizes the relevant scientific literature. Pose questions for future study. No more than 5 pages in length (double spaced), not including references or tables/figures.

  4. Why Birds? • Taste great • Look nice • Culturally important • Useful in sport and work • Interesting and everywhere • Need active conservation

  5. Birds are Tasty

  6. Subsistence Among Native Peoples Harvest of arctic birds: early 20th century

  7. Egging Starting in the 1840s… “Doc Robinson came west to start a theatre company but soon discovered more money was to be made by stealing. He plundered eggs from the common murres nesting at the Farallons and sold them for $1.75 a dozen. The Farallon Egg Company was soon formed and every May through July ten to fifteen men gathered, packaged, shipped and sold the eggs. During the early days 600,000 eggs were taken per year; an estimated 14 million eggs were removed in a 40-year period. The original murre population of a half million was reduced to several thousand by the turn of the century.” From, M. Ellis. History of the Farallon Islands: an essay Egging on SE Farallon Island, California

  8. Egging Laysan & Black-footed Albatross eggs being harvested on Midway Island. Early 20th century.

  9. Feathers are Pretty and Useful Check out Thor Hanson’s 2011 book “Feathers”

  10. Birds are Good Hunters

  11. They are Reliable Raven saving Elijah Swiss Army with carrier pigeons Early 19th century pigeon

  12. They are diverse and everywhere • ~10,000 species in world • 650 in US and Canada

  13. Hawaiian Drepanids--Splendid Isolation • Adaptive Radiation • Single ancestor, radiation in bill shape to exploit variety of resources • Convergent Evolution • Bill shape converges with mainland species utilizing similar resources (hummingbirds, grossbeaks)

  14. Hawaiian Drepanids--Deadly Isolation • Extinction and Endangerment due to lack of resistance to exotics • humans, mosquitoes, rodents • Trophic Cascade Effects • loss of pollinators leads to plant endangerment

  15. Important Early Players John J. Audubon (1785-1851)

  16. John Townsend Alexander Wilson (1766-1813)

  17. John Burroughs, John Muir, Teddy Roosevelt and George Bird Grinnell Heightened awareness of Eastern and Western nature Set conservation policy and reserved important lands, especially in the west Was a naturalist with Custer, worked with TR to start Audubon

  18. Ornithological Societies of North America A.O.U. W.O.S. C.O.S. A.F.O.

  19. Typical avian features 1. feathers 2. unique skull single occipital condyle cranial kinesis bills without teeth (in modern birds) gizzard (grinding or storage-crop) 3. hollow bones, many fusions 4. eggs 5. chambered heart 6. homeothermic, rapid BMR 7. lungs and air sacs 8. highly developed brain and nervous system

  20. Unique Skeleton

  21. 4-chambered heart

  22. Homethermic,rapid BMR

  23. Lungs and air sacs

  24. Highly developed brain and nervous system

  25. Early Evolution and Radiation of Birds • Mesozoic era—age of reptiles • Birds evolved from reptiles • Archaeopteryx 150 my in Jurasic

  26. Birds Diverged from Reptiles after Mammals From Tony Angell

  27. But From Which Reptiles? • All agree birds came from Archosaurs (Archosauria is a crown group, consisting of birds, crocodiles, and all descendants of their most recent common ancestor), but which group? • Crocodylia (crocs and gators) • Saurischia (reptile hip dinos) • Ornithischia (bird hip dinos) • Pterosauria (flying reptiles) • Thecodontia (ancestral group) Hypotheses abound as to whether birds evolved from basal thecodonts, saurischians (the most common view), or crocodylia

  28. The Prevalent View • Dinosaurs are icons of prehistory, and remain an important part of • the modern world in the form of some 10,000 living species of birds. Feathers, eggs, and parental care are known among the dinosaurs Dinosaurs are icons of prehistory, and remain an important part of the modern world in the form of some 10,000 living species of birds. (Brusatte et al. 2010. Earth-Science Reviews 101:68-100)

  29. Egg Color Supports BMT The internal nodes are (1) Archosauria, (2) Dinosauria, (3) Ornithischia, (4) Saurischia, (5) Eumaniraptora, (6) Paraves and (7) Aves. The egg icon in the phylogeny labels Eumaniraptora. All terminal taxa are represented by an icon indicating egg shape, and an example of reconstructed colour. If pigments are present, the area below the spectral function is coloured in blue (biliverdin) or orange (protoporphyrin IX), and all pigment bands are labelled with either blue (biliverdin) or red (protoporphyrin IX) dots. Relative Raman band intensities may vary owing to differential preservation. Photographs show the samples and nest icons encode three nesting strategies: buried, (partially) open ground and open tree nesting. AU, arbitrary units. Wiemann, et al. 2018, Nature 563:555-558

  30. Recent Evaluation of Alternative Hypotheses (James and Pourtless (2009, Ornithological Monographs No. 66) Closest Relatives of Archaeopteryx and other birds are are maniraptoran, theropod dinosaurs (idea known as BMT hypothesis)

  31. Archaeopteryx as Oldest Bird (Chiappe and Dyke 2002)

  32. Archaeopteryx v. Velocoraptor Greg Erickson, Florida State University

  33. (Chiappe and Dyke 2002)

  34. A New FossilGodefroit et al. 2013Small Feathered Dinosaur, Basal Bird, The Avialae Clade

  35. A New Phylogeny

  36. A New Phylogeny

  37. But modern bird divergence occurred even earlier in Cretaceous. Archaeornithura meemannae in clade containing modern birds (Ornithuromorpha) found in China130.7 MYA (Wang et al. 2015, Nature Communications, 5 May 2015)

  38. Hypotheses Are Still Being Tested Greg Erickson, Florida State University

  39. So, What is a Bird? • The Class Aves is “a node-based clade that includes Archaeopteryx, modern birds, their most recent common ancestor, and all its descendents”(James and Pourtless 2009) • Birds—as so defined--share only 3 derived morphological attributes (Chiappe 2002) • Caudal margin of the external naris nearly reaches or overlaps the rostral border of the antorbital cavity • A prominent acromion in the scapula • A pointy and shallow postacetabular wing of the ilium that has less that 50% the dorsovetral depth of the preacetabular wing at the hip socket (acetabulum) • The Clade Avialae, which is a sister group of Dromaeosaurids • If it has a flight wing and avian feathers it’s a bird (Feduccia 2013)

  40. Our Insights are Products of the Analysis • THE list of shared, derived characteristics held by all and only birds are questioned by some and reflect the author’s scoring schemes and pool of animals that are compared. Other analyses by other people provide some differences. As more fossils are discovered, scored, and analyzed the features of birds and the search for their closest relatives will become clearer.

  41. Birding would have been dangerous

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