What do birds' beaks and feet have to do with food?
Hello, to what extent are birds adapted to their respective diet through the shape of their beaks and feet?
Hello, to what extent are birds adapted to their respective diet through the shape of their beaks and feet?
Hello, I'm trying to figure out when the K+ channels close again after repolarization, since they close (significantly) more slowly than the Na+ channels. I've now found out that the Na+ channels are open for less than 1 ms, but the K+ channels say something different. I read 10 ms in one case, and 1-2…
Hello, I'm new here but I urgently need help! My budgie (Lucky) has been sick for about 4-5 days. She has diarrhea (light green, runny stools ) and is gagging a lot – often with mucus, sometimes nothing comes out at all. She is also extremely tired and puffed up all the time. I've also…
He just sits there and chills, he doesn't do anything, he's not even afraid anymore. Two weeks ago he was afraid of my hand, but not now. At first I thought he had gone blind, but that's not him, because I went to the vet on Monday and he said that he doesn't have anything,…
Will we continue to lose our fur, as has been happening over the millennia? Our hair used to protect us primarily from the cold, but with our clothing, this is no longer necessary. So, will our hair die if we can continue to populate this planet for thousands more years?
The best way not only to understand the evolutionary development of the bird’s beaks, but to understand the evolution as a whole is this:
https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darwinfinken
All animals have no multi-part cutlery!
Birds have special beaks for the food they can get!
Some also use their foot claw as support .
Beak: The shape depends on the food: picking up or cracking cores -> thick short strong snails. Insects from holes pick -> pint-like slender beaks. Plants -> spoon-like or sense-like scabs.
Feet: Eat from water -> Floating feet. AUf trees running around -> Climbing feet.
Generally: the beak is optimised to eat food, the feet are optimized to come to food (or to keep it firmly as in some parrots).