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Ornithology

Ornithology is a branch of zoology that concerns the "methodological study and consequent knowledge of birds with all that relates to them."[1] Several aspects of ornithology differ from related disciplines, due partly to the high visibility and the aesthetic appeal of birds.[2] It has also been an area with a large contribution made by amateurs in terms of time, resources, and financial support. Studies on birds have helped develop key concepts in biology including evolution, behaviour and ecology such as the definition of species, the process of speciation, instinct, learning, ecological niches, guilds, island biogeography, phylogeography, and conservation.[3]

A marbled godwit being ringed for studies on bird migration

While early ornithology was principally concerned with descriptions and distributions of species, ornithologists today seek answers to very specific questions, often using birds as models to test hypotheses or predictions based on theories. Most modern biological theories apply across life forms, and the number of scientists who identify themselves as "ornithologists" has therefore declined.[4] A wide range of tools and techniques are used in ornithology, both inside the laboratory and out in the field, and innovations are constantly made. Most biologists who recognise themselves as "Ornithologists" study specific categories, such as Anatomy, Taxonomy, or Ecology lifestyles and behaviours. Though this can be applied to the range of all biological practises.[5]

Definition and etymology

 
A collection of bird skins, belonging to the family Cotingidae

The word "ornithology" comes from the late 16th-century Latin ornithologia meaning "bird science" from the Greek ὄρνις ornis ("bird") and λόγος logos ("theory, science, thought").[6]

History

The history of ornithology largely reflects the trends in the history of biology, as well as many other scientific disciplines, including ecology, anatomy, physiology, paleontology, and more recently, molecular biology. Trends include the move from mere descriptions to the identification of patterns, thus towards elucidating the processes that produce these patterns.

Early knowledge and study

Humans have had an observational relationship with birds since prehistory, with some stone-age drawings being amongst the oldest indications of an interest in birds.[7][8] Birds were perhaps important as food sources, and bones of as many as 80 species have been found in excavations of early Stone Age settlements.[9][10][11] Waterbird and seabird remains have also been found in shell mounds on the island of Oronsay off the coast of Scotland.[7]

 
Geese from a wall panel from the tomb of Nefermaat, Egypt c. 2575–2551 B.C.

Cultures around the world have rich vocabularies related to birds.[12] Traditional bird names are often based on detailed knowledge of the behaviour, with many names being onomatopoeic, and still in use.[13] Traditional knowledge may also involve the use of birds in folk medicine[14] and knowledge of these practices are passed on through oral traditions (see ethno-ornithology).[15][16] Hunting of wild birds as well as their domestication would have required considerable knowledge of their habits. Poultry farming and falconry were practised from early times in many parts of the world. Artificial incubation of poultry was practised in China around 246 BC and around at least 400 BC in Egypt.[17] The Egyptians also made use of birds in their hieroglyphic scripts, many of which, though stylized, are still identifiable to species.[18]

 
Belon's comparison of birds and humans in his Book of Birds, 1555

Early written records provide valuable information on the past distributions of species. For instance, Xenophon records the abundance of the ostrich in Assyria (Anabasis, i. 5); this subspecies from Asia Minor is extinct and all extant ostrich races are today restricted to Africa. Other old writings such as the Vedas (1500–800 BC) demonstrate the careful observation of avian life histories and include the earliest reference to the habit of brood parasitism by the Asian koel (Eudynamys scolopacea).[19] Like writing, the early art of China, Japan, Persia, and India also demonstrate knowledge, with examples of scientifically accurate bird illustrations.[20]

Aristotle in 350 BC in his Historia Animalium[21] noted the habit of bird migration, moulting, egg laying, and lifespans, as well as compiling a list of 170 different bird species. However, he also introduced and propagated several myths, such as the idea that swallows hibernated in winter, although he noted that cranes migrated from the steppes of Scythia to the marshes at the headwaters of the Nile. The idea of swallow hibernation became so well established that even as late as in 1878, Elliott Coues could list as many as 182 contemporary publications dealing with the hibernation of swallows and little published evidence to contradict the theory.[22][23] Similar misconceptions existed regarding the breeding of barnacle geese. Their nests had not been seen, and they were believed to grow by transformations of goose barnacles, an idea that became prevalent from around the 11th century and noted by Bishop Giraldus Cambrensis (Gerald of Wales) in Topographia Hiberniae (1187).[24] Around 77 AD, Pliny the Elder described birds, among other creatures, in his Historia Naturalis.[25]

The earliest record of falconry comes from the reign of Sargon II (722–705 BC) in Assyria. Falconry is thought to have made its entry to Europe only after AD 400, brought in from the east after invasions by the Huns and Alans. Starting from the eighth century, numerous Arabic works on the subject and general ornithology were written, as well as translations of the works of ancient writers from Greek and Syriac. In the 12th and 13th centuries, crusades and conquest had subjugated Islamic territories in southern Italy, central Spain, and the Levant under European rule, and for the first time translations into Latin of the great works of Arabic and Greek scholars were made with the help of Jewish and Muslim scholars, especially in Toledo, which had fallen into Christian hands in 1085 and whose libraries had escaped destruction. Michael Scotus from Scotland made a Latin translation of Aristotle's work on animals from Arabic here around 1215, which was disseminated widely and was the first time in a millennium that this foundational text on zoology became available to Europeans. Falconry was popular in the Norman court in Sicily, and a number of works on the subject were written in Palermo. Emperor Frederick II of Hohenstaufen (1194–1250) learned about an falconry during his youth in Sicily and later built up a menagerie and sponsored translations of Arabic texts, among which the popular Arabic work known as the Liber Moaminus by an unknown author which was translated into Latin by Theodore of Antioch from Syria in 1240-1241 as the De Scientia Venandi per Aves, and also Michael Scotus (who had removed to Palermo) translated Ibn Sīnā's Kitāb al-Ḥayawān of 1027 for the Emperor, a commentary and scientific update of Aristotle's work which was part of Ibn Sīnā's massive Kitāb al-Šifāʾ. Frederick II eventually wrote his own treatise on falconry, the De arte venandi cum avibus, in which he related his ornithological observations and the results of the hunts and experiments his court enjoyed performing.[26][27]

Several early German and French scholars compiled old works and conducted new research on birds. These included Guillaume Rondelet, who described his observations in the Mediterranean, and Pierre Belon, who described the fish and birds that he had seen in France and the Levant. Belon's Book of Birds (1555) is a folio volume with descriptions of some 200 species. His comparison of the skeleton of humans and birds is considered as a landmark in comparative anatomy.[28] Volcher Coiter (1534–1576), a Dutch anatomist, made detailed studies of the internal structures of birds and produced a classification of birds, De Differentiis Avium (around 1572), that was based on structure and habits.[29] Konrad Gesner wrote the Vogelbuch and Icones avium omnium around 1557. Like Gesner, Ulisse Aldrovandi, an encyclopedic naturalist, began a 14-volume natural history with three volumes on birds, entitled ornithologiae hoc est de avibus historiae libri XII, which was published from 1599 to 1603. Aldrovandi showed great interest in plants and animals, and his work included 3000 drawings of fruits, flowers, plants, and animals, published in 363 volumes. His Ornithology alone covers 2000 pages and included such aspects as the chicken and poultry techniques. He used a number of traits including behaviour, particularly bathing and dusting, to classify bird groups.[30][31][32]

 
Cover of Ulisse Aldrovandi's Ornithology, 1599
 
Antonio Valli da Todi, who wrote on aviculture in 1601, knew the connections between territory and song[33]

William Turner's Historia Avium (History of Birds), published at Cologne in 1544, was an early ornithological work from England. He noted the commonness of kites in English cities where they snatched food out of the hands of children. He included folk beliefs such as those of anglers. Anglers believed that the osprey emptied their fishponds and would kill them, mixing the flesh of the osprey into their fish bait. Turner's work reflected the violent times in which he lived, and stands in contrast to later works such as Gilbert White's 1789 The Natural History and Antiquities of Selborne that were written in a tranquil era.[28][34]

In the 17th century, Francis Willughby (1635–1672) and John Ray (1627–1705) came up with the first major system of bird classification that was based on function and morphology rather than on form or behaviour. Willughby's Ornithologiae libri tres (1676) completed by John Ray is sometimes considered to mark the beginning of scientific ornithology. Ray also worked on Ornithologia, which was published posthumously in 1713 as Synopsis methodica avium et piscium.[35] The earliest list of British birds, Pinax Rerum Naturalium Britannicarum, was written by Christopher Merrett in 1667, but authors such as John Ray considered it of little value.[36] Ray did, however, value the expertise of the naturalist Sir Thomas Browne (1605–82), who not only answered his queries on ornithological identification and nomenclature, but also those of Willoughby and Merrett in letter correspondence. Browne himself in his lifetime kept an eagle, owl, cormorant, bittern, and ostrich, penned a tract on falconry, and introduced the words "incubation" and "oviparous" into the English language.[37][38]

Towards the late 18th century, Mathurin Jacques Brisson (1723–1806) and Comte de Buffon (1707–1788) began new works on birds. Brisson produced a six-volume work Ornithologie in 1760 and Buffon's included nine volumes (volumes 16–24) on birds Histoire naturelle des oiseaux (1770–1785) in his work on science Histoire naturelle générale et particulière (1749–1804). Jacob Temminck sponsored François Le Vaillant [1753–1824] to collect bird specimens in Southern Africa and Le Vaillant's six-volume Histoire naturelle des oiseaux d'Afrique (1796–1808) included many non-African birds. His other bird books produced in collaboration with the artist Barraband are considered among the most valuable illustrated guides ever produced. Louis Jean Pierre Vieillot (1748–1831) spent 10 years studying North American birds and wrote the Histoire naturelle des oiseaux de l'Amerique septentrionale (1807–1808?). Vieillot pioneered in the use of life histories and habits in classification.[39] Alexander Wilson composed a nine-volume work, American Ornithology, published 1808-1814, which is the first such record of North American birds, significantly antedating Audubon. In the early 19th century, Lewis and Clark studied and identified many birds in the western United States. John James Audubon, born in 1785, observed and painted birds in France and later in the Ohio and Mississippi valleys. From 1827 to 1838, Audubon published The Birds of America, which was engraved by Robert Havell Sr. and his son Robert Havell Jr. Containing 435 engravings, it is often regarded as the greatest ornithological work in history.

Scientific studies

 
Early bird study focused on collectibles such as eggs and nests.

The emergence of ornithology as a scientific discipline began in the 18th century, when Mark Catesby published his two-volume Natural History of Carolina, Florida, and the Bahama Islands, a landmark work which included 220 hand-painted engravings and was the basis for many of the species Carl Linnaeus described in the 1758 Systema Naturae. Linnaeus' work revolutionised bird taxonomy by assigning every species a binomial name, categorising them into different genera. However, ornithology did not emerge as a specialised science until the Victorian era—with the popularization of natural history, and the collection of natural objects such as bird eggs and skins.[40][41] This specialization led to the formation in Britain of the British Ornithologists' Union in 1858. In 1859, the members founded its journal The Ibis. The sudden spurt in ornithology was also due in part to colonialism. At 100 years later, in 1959, R. E. Moreau noted that ornithology in this period was preoccupied with the geographical distributions of various species of birds.[42]

No doubt the preoccupation with widely extended geographical ornithology, was fostered by the immensity of the areas over which British rule or influence stretched during the 19th century and for some time afterwards.

— Moreau[43]

The bird collectors of the Victorian era observed the variations in bird forms and habits across geographic regions, noting local specialization and variation in widespread species. The collections of museums and private collectors grew with contributions from various parts of the world. The naming of species with binomials and the organization of birds into groups based on their similarities became the main work of museum specialists. The variations in widespread birds across geographical regions caused the introduction of trinomial names.

 
Kaup's classification of the crow family

The search for patterns in the variations of birds was attempted by many. Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling (1775–1854), his student Johann Baptist von Spix (1781–1826), and several others believed that a hidden and innate mathematical order existed in the forms of birds. They believed that a "natural" classification was available and superior to "artificial" ones. A particularly popular idea was the Quinarian system popularised by Nicholas Aylward Vigors (1785–1840), William Sharp Macleay (1792–1865), William Swainson, and others. The idea was that nature followed a "rule of five" with five groups nested hierarchically. Some had attempted a rule of four, but Johann Jakob Kaup (1803–1873) insisted that the number five was special, noting that other natural entities such as the senses also came in fives. He followed this idea and demonstrated his view of the order within the crow family. Where he failed to find five genera, he left a blank insisting that a new genus would be found to fill these gaps. These ideas were replaced by more complex "maps" of affinities in works by Hugh Edwin Strickland and Alfred Russel Wallace.[44][45] A major advance was made by Max Fürbringer in 1888, who established a comprehensive phylogeny of birds based on anatomy, morphology, distribution, and biology. This was developed further by Hans Gadow and others.[46][47]

The Galapagos finches were especially influential in the development of Charles Darwin's theory of evolution. His contemporary Alfred Russel Wallace also noted these variations and the geographical separations between different forms leading to the study of biogeography. Wallace was influenced by the work of Philip Lutley Sclater on the distribution patterns of birds.[48]

 
Quinarian system of bird classification by Swainson

For Darwin, the problem was how species arose from a common ancestor, but he did not attempt to find rules for delineation of species. The species problem was tackled by the ornithologist Ernst Mayr, who was able to demonstrate that geographical isolation and the accumulation of genetic differences led to the splitting of species.[49][50]

Early ornithologists were preoccupied with matters of species identification. Only systematics counted as true science and field studies were considered inferior through much of the 19th century.[51] In 1901, Robert Ridgway wrote in the introduction to The Birds of North and Middle America that:

There are two essentially different kinds of ornithology: systematic or scientific, and popular. The former deals with the structure and classification of birds, their synonymies, and technical descriptions. The latter treats of their habits, songs, nesting, and other facts pertaining to their life histories.

This early idea that the study of living birds was merely recreation held sway until ecological theories became the predominant focus of ornithological studies.[3][42] The study of birds in their habitats was particularly advanced in Germany with bird ringing stations established as early as 1903. By the 1920s, the Journal für Ornithologie included many papers on the behaviour, ecology, anatomy, and physiology, many written by Erwin Stresemann. Stresemann changed the editorial policy of the journal, leading both to a unification of field and laboratory studies and a shift of research from museums to universities.[51] Ornithology in the United States continued to be dominated by museum studies of morphological variations, species identities, and geographic distributions, until it was influenced by Stresemann's student Ernst Mayr.[52] In Britain, some of the earliest ornithological works that used the word ecology appeared in 1915.[53] The Ibis, however, resisted the introduction of these new methods of study, and no paper on ecology appeared until 1943.[42] The work of David Lack on population ecology was pioneering. Newer quantitative approaches were introduced for the study of ecology and behaviour, and this was not readily accepted. For instance, Claud Ticehurst wrote:

Sometimes it seems that elaborate plans and statistics are made to prove what is commonplace knowledge to the mere collector, such as that hunting parties often travel more or less in circles.

— Ticehurst[42]

David Lack's studies on population ecology sought to find the processes involved in the regulation of population based on the evolution of optimal clutch sizes. He concluded that population was regulated primarily by density-dependent controls, and also suggested that natural selection produces life-history traits that maximize the fitness of individuals. Others, such as Wynne-Edwards, interpreted population regulation as a mechanism that aided the "species" rather than individuals. This led to widespread and sometimes bitter debate on what constituted the "unit of selection".[49] Lack also pioneered the use of many new tools for ornithological research, including the idea of using radar to study bird migration.[54]

Birds were also widely used in studies of the niche hypothesis and Georgii Gause's competitive exclusion principle. Work on resource partitioning and the structuring of bird communities through competition were made by Robert MacArthur. Patterns of biodiversity also became a topic of interest. Work on the relationship of the number of species to area and its application in the study of island biogeography was pioneered by E. O. Wilson and Robert MacArthur.[49] These studies led to the development of the discipline of landscape ecology.

 
A mounted specimen of a red-footed falcon

John Hurrell Crook studied the behaviour of weaverbirds and demonstrated the links between ecological conditions, behaviour, and social systems.[49][55][56] Principles from economics were introduced to the study of biology by Jerram L. Brown in his work on explaining territorial behaviour. This led to more studies of behaviour that made use of cost-benefit analyses.[57] The rising interest in sociobiology also led to a spurt of bird studies in this area.[49][58]

The study of imprinting behaviour in ducks and geese by Konrad Lorenz and the studies of instinct in herring gulls by Nicolaas Tinbergen led to the establishment of the field of ethology. The study of learning became an area of interest and the study of bird songs has been a model for studies in neuroethology. The study of hormones and physiology in the control of behaviour has also been aided by bird models. These have helped in finding the proximate causes of circadian and seasonal cycles. Studies on migration have attempted to answer questions on the evolution of migration, orientation, and navigation.[49]

The growth of genetics and the rise of molecular biology led to the application of the gene-centered view of evolution to explain avian phenomena. Studies on kinship and altruism, such as helpers, became of particular interest. The idea of inclusive fitness was used to interpret observations on behaviour and life history, and birds were widely used models for testing hypotheses based on theories postulated by W. D. Hamilton and others.[49]

The new tools of molecular biology changed the study of bird systematics, which changed from being based on phenotype to the underlying genotype. The use of techniques such as DNA-DNA hybridization to study evolutionary relationships was pioneered by Charles Sibley and Jon Edward Ahlquist, resulting in what is called the Sibley-Ahlquist taxonomy. These early techniques have been replaced by newer ones based on mitochondrial DNA sequences and molecular phylogenetics approaches that make use of computational procedures for sequence alignment, construction of phylogenetic trees, and calibration of molecular clocks to infer evolutionary relationships.[59][60] Molecular techniques are also widely used in studies of avian population biology and ecology.[61]

Rise to popularity

The use of field glasses or telescopes for bird observation began in the 1820s and 1830s, with pioneers such as J. Dovaston (who also pioneered in the use of bird feeders), but instruction manuals did not begin to insist on the use of optical aids such as "a first-class telescope" or "field glass" until the 1880s.[62][63]

 
Page from an early field guide by Florence Augusta Merriam Bailey

The rise of field guides for the identification of birds was another major innovation. The early guides such as those of Thomas Bewick (two volumes) and William Yarrell (three volumes) were cumbersome, and mainly focused on identifying specimens in the hand. The earliest of the new generation of field guides was prepared by Florence Merriam, sister of Clinton Hart Merriam, the mammalogist. This was published in 1887 in a series Hints to Audubon Workers:Fifty Birds and How to Know Them in Grinnell's Audubon Magazine.[52] These were followed by new field guides,[64] from the pioneering illustrated handbooks of Frank Chapman (ornithologist) to the classic Field Guide to the Birds by Roger Tory Peterson in 1934, including the Birds from the West Indies published in 1936 by Dr James Bond (ornithologist) - the same who inspired the amateur ornithologist Ian Fleming in naming his immortal literary spy.[65]

The interest in birdwatching grew in popularity in many parts of the world, and the possibility for amateurs to contribute to biological studies was soon realized. As early as 1916, Julian Huxley wrote a two-part article in The Auk, noting the tensions between amateurs and professionals, and suggested the possibility that the "vast army of bird lovers and bird watchers could begin providing the data scientists needed to address the fundamental problems of biology."[66][67] The amateur ornithologist Harold F. Mayfield noted that the field was also funded by non-professionals. He noted that in 1975, 12% of the papers in American ornithology journals were written by persons who were not employed in biology related work.[68]

Organizations were started in many countries, and these grew rapidly in membership, most notable among them being the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) in Britain and the Audubon Society in the US, which started in 1885. Both these organizations were started with the primary objective of conservation. The RSPB, born in 1889, grew from a small Croydon-based group of women, including Eliza Phillips, Etta Lemon, Catherine Hall and Hannah Poland. Calling themselves the "Fur, Fin, and Feather Folk", the group met regularly and took a pledge "to refrain from wearing the feathers of any birds not killed for the purpose of food, the ostrich only exempted." The organization did not allow men as members initially, avenging a policy of the British Ornithologists' Union to keep out women.[40] Unlike the RSPB, which was primarily conservation oriented, the British Trust for Ornithology was started in 1933 with the aim of advancing ornithological research. Members were often involved in collaborative ornithological projects. These projects have resulted in atlases which detail the distribution of bird species across Britain.[4] In Canada, citizen scientist Elsie Cassels studied migratory birds and was involved in establishing Gaetz Lakes bird sanctuary.[69] In the United States, the Breeding Bird Surveys, conducted by the US Geological Survey, have also produced atlases with information on breeding densities and changes in the density and distribution over time. Other volunteer collaborative ornithology projects were subsequently established in other parts of the world.[70]

Techniques

The tools and techniques of ornithology are varied, and new inventions and approaches are quickly incorporated. The techniques may be broadly dealt under the categories of those that are applicable to specimens and those that are used in the field, but the classification is rough and many analysis techniques are usable both in the laboratory and field or may require a combination of field and laboratory techniques.

Collections

 
Bird-preservation techniques

The earliest approaches to modern bird study involved the collection of eggs, a practice known as oology. While collecting became a pastime for many amateurs, the labels associated with these early egg collections made them unreliable for the serious study of bird breeding. To preserve eggs, a tiny hole was made and the contents extracted. This technique became standard with the invention of the blow drill around 1830.[40] Egg collection is no longer popular; however, historic museum collections have been of value in determining the effects of pesticides such as DDT on physiology.[71][72] Museum bird collections continue to act as a resource for taxonomic studies.[73]

 
Morphometric measurements of birds are important in systematics.

The use of bird skins to document species has been a standard part of systematic ornithology. Bird skins are prepared by retaining the key bones of the wings, legs, and skull along with the skin and feathers. In the past, they were treated with arsenic to prevent fungal and insect (mostly dermestid) attack. Arsenic, being toxic, was replaced by less-toxic borax. Amateur and professional collectors became familiar with these skinning techniques and started sending in their skins to museums, some of them from distant locations. This led to the formation of huge collections of bird skins in museums in Europe and North America. Many private collections were also formed. These became references for comparison of species, and the ornithologists at these museums were able to compare species from different locations, often places that they themselves never visited. Morphometrics of these skins, particularly the lengths of the tarsus, bill, tail, and wing became important in the descriptions of bird species. These skin collections have been used in more recent times for studies on molecular phylogenetics by the extraction of ancient DNA. The importance of type specimens in the description of species make skin collections a vital resource for systematic ornithology. However, with the rise of molecular techniques, establishing the taxonomic status of new discoveries, such as the Bulo Burti boubou (Laniarius liberatus, no longer a valid species) and the Bugun liocichla (Liocichla bugunorum), using blood, DNA and feather samples as the holotype material, has now become possible.

Other methods of preservation include the storage of specimens in spirit. Such wet specimens have special value in physiological and anatomical study, apart from providing better quality of DNA for molecular studies.[74] Freeze drying of specimens is another technique that has the advantage of preserving stomach contents and anatomy, although it tends to shrink, making it less reliable for morphometrics.[75][76]

In the field

The study of birds in the field was helped enormously by improvements in optics. Photography made it possible to document birds in the field with great accuracy. High-power spotting scopes today allow observers to detect minute morphological differences that were earlier possible only by examination of the specimen "in the hand".[77]

 
A bird caught in a mist net

The capture and marking of birds enable detailed studies of life history. Techniques for capturing birds are varied and include the use of bird liming for perching birds, mist nets for woodland birds, cannon netting for open-area flocking birds, the bal-chatri trap for raptors,[78] decoys and funnel traps for water birds.[79][80]

 
A researcher measures a wild woodpecker. The bird's right leg has a metal identification tag.

The bird in the hand may be examined and measurements can be made, including standard lengths and weights. Feather moult and skull ossification provide indications of age and health. Sex can be determined by examination of anatomy in some sexually nondimorphic species. Blood samples may be drawn to determine hormonal conditions in studies of physiology, identify DNA markers for studying genetics and kinship in studies of breeding biology and phylogeography. Blood may also be used to identify pathogens and arthropod-borne viruses. Ectoparasites may be collected for studies of coevolution and zoonoses.[81] In many cryptic species, measurements (such as the relative lengths of wing feathers in warblers) are vital in establishing identity.

 
A California condor marked with wing tags

Captured birds are often marked for future recognition. Rings or bands provide long-lasting identification, but require capture for the information on them to be read. Field-identifiable marks such as coloured bands, wing tags, or dyes enable short-term studies where individual identification is required. Mark and recapture techniques make demographic studies possible. Ringing has traditionally been used in the study of migration. In recent times, satellite transmitters provide the ability to track migrating birds in near-real time.[82]

Techniques for estimating population density include point counts, transects, and territory mapping. Observations are made in the field using carefully designed protocols and the data may be analysed to estimate bird diversity, relative abundance, or absolute population densities.[83] These methods may be used repeatedly over large timespans to monitor changes in the environment.[84] Camera traps have been found to be a useful tool for the detection and documentation of elusive species, nest predators and in the quantitative analysis of frugivory, seed dispersal and behaviour.[85][86]

In the laboratory

Many aspects of bird biology are difficult to study in the field. These include the study of behavioural and physiological changes that require a long duration of access to the bird. Nondestructive samples of blood or feathers taken during field studies may be studied in the laboratory. For instance, the variation in the ratios of stable hydrogen isotopes across latitudes makes establishing the origins of migrant birds possible using mass spectrometric analysis of feather samples.[87] These techniques can be used in combination with other techniques such as ringing.[88]

The first attenuated vaccine developed by Louis Pasteur, for fowl cholera, was tested on poultry in 1878.[89] Anti-malarials were tested on birds which harbour avian-malarias.[90] Poultry continues to be used as a model for many studies in non-mammalian immunology.[91]

Studies in bird behaviour include the use of tamed and trained birds in captivity. Studies on bird intelligence and song learning have been largely laboratory-based. Field researchers may make use of a wide range of techniques such as the use of dummy owls to elicit mobbing behaviour, and dummy males or the use of call playback to elicit territorial behaviour and thereby to establish the boundaries of bird territories.[92]

 
An Emlen funnel is used to study the orientation behaviour of migratory birds in a laboratory. Experimenters sometimes place the funnel inside a planetarium to study night migration.

Studies of bird migration including aspects of navigation, orientation, and physiology are often studied using captive birds in special cages that record their activities. The Emlen funnel, for instance, makes use of a cage with an inkpad at the centre and a conical floor where the ink marks can be counted to identify the direction in which the bird attempts to fly. The funnel can have a transparent top and visible cues such as the direction of sunlight may be controlled using mirrors or the positions of the stars simulated in a planetarium.[93]

The entire genome of the domestic fowl (Gallus gallus) was sequenced in 2004, and was followed in 2008 by the genome of the zebra finch (Taeniopygia guttata).[94] Such whole-genome sequencing projects allow for studies on evolutionary processes involved in speciation.[95] Associations between the expression of genes and behaviour may be studied using candidate genes. Variations in the exploratory behaviour of great tits (Parus major) have been found to be linked with a gene orthologous to the human gene DRD4 (Dopamine receptor D4) which is known to be associated with novelty-seeking behaviour.[96] The role of gene expression in developmental differences and morphological variations have been studied in Darwin's finches. The difference in the expression of Bmp4 have been shown to be associated with changes in the growth and shape of the beak.[97][98]

The chicken has long been a model organism for studying vertebrate developmental biology. As the embryo is readily accessible, its development can be easily followed (unlike mice). This also allows the use of electroporation for studying the effect of adding or silencing a gene. Other tools for perturbing their genetic makeup are chicken embryonic stem cells and viral vectors.[99]

Collaborative studies

 
Summer distribution and abundance of Canada goose using data from the North American Breeding Bird Surveys 1994–2003

With the widespread interest in birds, use of a large number of people to work on collaborative ornithological projects that cover large geographic scales has been possible.[100][101] These citizen science projects include nationwide projects such as the Christmas Bird Count,[102] Backyard Bird Count,[103] the North American Breeding Bird Survey, the Canadian EPOQ[104] or regional projects such as the Asian Waterfowl Census and Spring Alive in Europe. These projects help to identify distributions of birds, their population densities and changes over time, arrival and departure dates of migration, breeding seasonality, and even population genetics.[105] The results of many of these projects are published as bird atlases. Studies of migration using bird ringing or colour marking often involve the cooperation of people and organizations in different countries.[106]

Applications

Wild birds impact many human activities, while domesticated birds are important sources of eggs, meat, feathers, and other products. Applied and economic ornithology aim to reduce the ill effects of problem birds and enhance gains from beneficial species.

 
Red-billed queleas are a major agricultural pest in parts of Africa.

The role of some species of birds as pests has been well known, particularly in agriculture. Granivorous birds such as the queleas in Africa are among the most numerous birds in the world, and foraging flocks can cause devastation.[107][108] Many insectivorous birds are also noted as beneficial in agriculture. Many early studies on the benefits or damages caused by birds in fields were made by analysis of stomach contents and observation of feeding behaviour.[109] Modern studies aimed to manage birds in agriculture make use of a wide range of principles from ecology.[110] Intensive aquaculture has brought humans in conflict with fish-eating birds such as cormorants.[111]

Large flocks of pigeons and starlings in cities are often considered as a nuisance, and techniques to reduce their populations or their impacts are constantly innovated.[112][113] Birds are also of medical importance, and their role as carriers of human diseases such as Japanese encephalitis, West Nile virus, and influenza H5N1 have been widely recognized.[114][115] Bird strikes and the damage they cause in aviation are of particularly great importance, due to the fatal consequences and the level of economic losses caused. The airline industry incurs worldwide damages of an estimated US$1.2 billion each year.[116]

Many species of birds have been driven to extinction by human activities. Being conspicuous elements of the ecosystem, they have been considered as indicators of ecological health.[117] They have also helped in gathering support for habitat conservation.[118] Bird conservation requires specialized knowledge in aspects of biology and ecology, and may require the use of very location-specific approaches. Ornithologists contribute to conservation biology by studying the ecology of birds in the wild and identifying the key threats and ways of enhancing the survival of species.[119] Critically endangered species such as the California condor have had to be captured and bred in captivity. Such ex situ conservation measures may be followed by reintroduction of the species into the wild.[120]

See also

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Additional sources

External links

  • Lewis, Daniel. The Feathery Tribe: Robert Ridgway and the Modern Study of Birds. Yale University Press. [1].
  • Ornithologie (1773–1792) Francois Nicholas Martinet Digital Edition Smithsonian Digital Libraries
  • . Archived from the original on May 9, 2013. Retrieved May 23, 2004.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  • History of ornithology and ornithology collections in Victoria, Australia on Culture Victoria
  • History of ornithology in China
  • Hill ornithology collections

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This article is about the field of zoology For the jazz composition see Ornithology composition Ornithology is a branch of zoology that concerns the methodological study and consequent knowledge of birds with all that relates to them 1 Several aspects of ornithology differ from related disciplines due partly to the high visibility and the aesthetic appeal of birds 2 It has also been an area with a large contribution made by amateurs in terms of time resources and financial support Studies on birds have helped develop key concepts in biology including evolution behaviour and ecology such as the definition of species the process of speciation instinct learning ecological niches guilds island biogeography phylogeography and conservation 3 A marbled godwit being ringed for studies on bird migration While early ornithology was principally concerned with descriptions and distributions of species ornithologists today seek answers to very specific questions often using birds as models to test hypotheses or predictions based on theories Most modern biological theories apply across life forms and the number of scientists who identify themselves as ornithologists has therefore declined 4 A wide range of tools and techniques are used in ornithology both inside the laboratory and out in the field and innovations are constantly made Most biologists who recognise themselves as Ornithologists study specific categories such as Anatomy Taxonomy or Ecology lifestyles and behaviours Though this can be applied to the range of all biological practises 5 Contents 1 Definition and etymology 2 History 2 1 Early knowledge and study 2 2 Scientific studies 2 3 Rise to popularity 3 Techniques 3 1 Collections 3 2 In the field 3 3 In the laboratory 3 4 Collaborative studies 4 Applications 5 See also 6 References 7 Additional sources 8 External linksDefinition and etymology Edit A collection of bird skins belonging to the family Cotingidae The word ornithology comes from the late 16th century Latin ornithologia meaning bird science from the Greek ὄrnis ornis bird and logos logos theory science thought 6 History EditSee also Timeline of ornithology The history of ornithology largely reflects the trends in the history of biology as well as many other scientific disciplines including ecology anatomy physiology paleontology and more recently molecular biology Trends include the move from mere descriptions to the identification of patterns thus towards elucidating the processes that produce these patterns Early knowledge and study Edit Humans have had an observational relationship with birds since prehistory with some stone age drawings being amongst the oldest indications of an interest in birds 7 8 Birds were perhaps important as food sources and bones of as many as 80 species have been found in excavations of early Stone Age settlements 9 10 11 Waterbird and seabird remains have also been found in shell mounds on the island of Oronsay off the coast of Scotland 7 Geese from a wall panel from the tomb of Nefermaat Egypt c 2575 2551 B C Cultures around the world have rich vocabularies related to birds 12 Traditional bird names are often based on detailed knowledge of the behaviour with many names being onomatopoeic and still in use 13 Traditional knowledge may also involve the use of birds in folk medicine 14 and knowledge of these practices are passed on through oral traditions see ethno ornithology 15 16 Hunting of wild birds as well as their domestication would have required considerable knowledge of their habits Poultry farming and falconry were practised from early times in many parts of the world Artificial incubation of poultry was practised in China around 246 BC and around at least 400 BC in Egypt 17 The Egyptians also made use of birds in their hieroglyphic scripts many of which though stylized are still identifiable to species 18 Belon s comparison of birds and humans in his Book of Birds 1555Early written records provide valuable information on the past distributions of species For instance Xenophon records the abundance of the ostrich in Assyria Anabasis i 5 this subspecies from Asia Minor is extinct and all extant ostrich races are today restricted to Africa Other old writings such as the Vedas 1500 800 BC demonstrate the careful observation of avian life histories and include the earliest reference to the habit of brood parasitism by the Asian koel Eudynamys scolopacea 19 Like writing the early art of China Japan Persia and India also demonstrate knowledge with examples of scientifically accurate bird illustrations 20 Aristotle in 350 BC in his Historia Animalium 21 noted the habit of bird migration moulting egg laying and lifespans as well as compiling a list of 170 different bird species However he also introduced and propagated several myths such as the idea that swallows hibernated in winter although he noted that cranes migrated from the steppes of Scythia to the marshes at the headwaters of the Nile The idea of swallow hibernation became so well established that even as late as in 1878 Elliott Coues could list as many as 182 contemporary publications dealing with the hibernation of swallows and little published evidence to contradict the theory 22 23 Similar misconceptions existed regarding the breeding of barnacle geese Their nests had not been seen and they were believed to grow by transformations of goose barnacles an idea that became prevalent from around the 11th century and noted by Bishop Giraldus Cambrensis Gerald of Wales in Topographia Hiberniae 1187 24 Around 77 AD Pliny the Elder described birds among other creatures in his Historia Naturalis 25 The earliest record of falconry comes from the reign of Sargon II 722 705 BC in Assyria Falconry is thought to have made its entry to Europe only after AD 400 brought in from the east after invasions by the Huns and Alans Starting from the eighth century numerous Arabic works on the subject and general ornithology were written as well as translations of the works of ancient writers from Greek and Syriac In the 12th and 13th centuries crusades and conquest had subjugated Islamic territories in southern Italy central Spain and the Levant under European rule and for the first time translations into Latin of the great works of Arabic and Greek scholars were made with the help of Jewish and Muslim scholars especially in Toledo which had fallen into Christian hands in 1085 and whose libraries had escaped destruction Michael Scotus from Scotland made a Latin translation of Aristotle s work on animals from Arabic here around 1215 which was disseminated widely and was the first time in a millennium that this foundational text on zoology became available to Europeans Falconry was popular in the Norman court in Sicily and a number of works on the subject were written in Palermo Emperor Frederick II of Hohenstaufen 1194 1250 learned about an falconry during his youth in Sicily and later built up a menagerie and sponsored translations of Arabic texts among which the popular Arabic work known as the Liber Moaminus by an unknown author which was translated into Latin by Theodore of Antioch from Syria in 1240 1241 as the De Scientia Venandi per Aves and also Michael Scotus who had removed to Palermo translated Ibn Sina s Kitab al Ḥayawan of 1027 for the Emperor a commentary and scientific update of Aristotle s work which was part of Ibn Sina s massive Kitab al Sifaʾ Frederick II eventually wrote his own treatise on falconry the De arte venandi cum avibus in which he related his ornithological observations and the results of the hunts and experiments his court enjoyed performing 26 27 Several early German and French scholars compiled old works and conducted new research on birds These included Guillaume Rondelet who described his observations in the Mediterranean and Pierre Belon who described the fish and birds that he had seen in France and the Levant Belon s Book of Birds 1555 is a folio volume with descriptions of some 200 species His comparison of the skeleton of humans and birds is considered as a landmark in comparative anatomy 28 Volcher Coiter 1534 1576 a Dutch anatomist made detailed studies of the internal structures of birds and produced a classification of birds De Differentiis Avium around 1572 that was based on structure and habits 29 Konrad Gesner wrote the Vogelbuch and Icones avium omnium around 1557 Like Gesner Ulisse Aldrovandi an encyclopedic naturalist began a 14 volume natural history with three volumes on birds entitled ornithologiae hoc est de avibus historiae libri XII which was published from 1599 to 1603 Aldrovandi showed great interest in plants and animals and his work included 3000 drawings of fruits flowers plants and animals published in 363 volumes His Ornithology alone covers 2000 pages and included such aspects as the chicken and poultry techniques He used a number of traits including behaviour particularly bathing and dusting to classify bird groups 30 31 32 Cover of Ulisse Aldrovandi s Ornithology 1599 Antonio Valli da Todi who wrote on aviculture in 1601 knew the connections between territory and song 33 William Turner s Historia Avium History of Birds published at Cologne in 1544 was an early ornithological work from England He noted the commonness of kites in English cities where they snatched food out of the hands of children He included folk beliefs such as those of anglers Anglers believed that the osprey emptied their fishponds and would kill them mixing the flesh of the osprey into their fish bait Turner s work reflected the violent times in which he lived and stands in contrast to later works such as Gilbert White s 1789 The Natural History and Antiquities of Selborne that were written in a tranquil era 28 34 In the 17th century Francis Willughby 1635 1672 and John Ray 1627 1705 came up with the first major system of bird classification that was based on function and morphology rather than on form or behaviour Willughby s Ornithologiae libri tres 1676 completed by John Ray is sometimes considered to mark the beginning of scientific ornithology Ray also worked on Ornithologia which was published posthumously in 1713 as Synopsis methodica avium et piscium 35 The earliest list of British birds Pinax Rerum Naturalium Britannicarum was written by Christopher Merrett in 1667 but authors such as John Ray considered it of little value 36 Ray did however value the expertise of the naturalist Sir Thomas Browne 1605 82 who not only answered his queries on ornithological identification and nomenclature but also those of Willoughby and Merrett in letter correspondence Browne himself in his lifetime kept an eagle owl cormorant bittern and ostrich penned a tract on falconry and introduced the words incubation and oviparous into the English language 37 38 An Experiment on a Bird in the Air Pump Joseph Wright of Derby 1768 Towards the late 18th century Mathurin Jacques Brisson 1723 1806 and Comte de Buffon 1707 1788 began new works on birds Brisson produced a six volume work Ornithologie in 1760 and Buffon s included nine volumes volumes 16 24 on birds Histoire naturelle des oiseaux 1770 1785 in his work on science Histoire naturelle generale et particuliere 1749 1804 Jacob Temminck sponsored Francois Le Vaillant 1753 1824 to collect bird specimens in Southern Africa and Le Vaillant s six volume Histoire naturelle des oiseaux d Afrique 1796 1808 included many non African birds His other bird books produced in collaboration with the artist Barraband are considered among the most valuable illustrated guides ever produced Louis Jean Pierre Vieillot 1748 1831 spent 10 years studying North American birds and wrote the Histoire naturelle des oiseaux de l Amerique septentrionale 1807 1808 Vieillot pioneered in the use of life histories and habits in classification 39 Alexander Wilson composed a nine volume work American Ornithology published 1808 1814 which is the first such record of North American birds significantly antedating Audubon In the early 19th century Lewis and Clark studied and identified many birds in the western United States John James Audubon born in 1785 observed and painted birds in France and later in the Ohio and Mississippi valleys From 1827 to 1838 Audubon published The Birds of America which was engraved by Robert Havell Sr and his son Robert Havell Jr Containing 435 engravings it is often regarded as the greatest ornithological work in history Scientific studies Edit Early bird study focused on collectibles such as eggs and nests The emergence of ornithology as a scientific discipline began in the 18th century when Mark Catesby published his two volume Natural History of Carolina Florida and the Bahama Islands a landmark work which included 220 hand painted engravings and was the basis for many of the species Carl Linnaeus described in the 1758 Systema Naturae Linnaeus work revolutionised bird taxonomy by assigning every species a binomial name categorising them into different genera However ornithology did not emerge as a specialised science until the Victorian era with the popularization of natural history and the collection of natural objects such as bird eggs and skins 40 41 This specialization led to the formation in Britain of the British Ornithologists Union in 1858 In 1859 the members founded its journal The Ibis The sudden spurt in ornithology was also due in part to colonialism At 100 years later in 1959 R E Moreau noted that ornithology in this period was preoccupied with the geographical distributions of various species of birds 42 No doubt the preoccupation with widely extended geographical ornithology was fostered by the immensity of the areas over which British rule or influence stretched during the 19th century and for some time afterwards Moreau 43 The bird collectors of the Victorian era observed the variations in bird forms and habits across geographic regions noting local specialization and variation in widespread species The collections of museums and private collectors grew with contributions from various parts of the world The naming of species with binomials and the organization of birds into groups based on their similarities became the main work of museum specialists The variations in widespread birds across geographical regions caused the introduction of trinomial names Kaup s classification of the crow family The search for patterns in the variations of birds was attempted by many Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling 1775 1854 his student Johann Baptist von Spix 1781 1826 and several others believed that a hidden and innate mathematical order existed in the forms of birds They believed that a natural classification was available and superior to artificial ones A particularly popular idea was the Quinarian system popularised by Nicholas Aylward Vigors 1785 1840 William Sharp Macleay 1792 1865 William Swainson and others The idea was that nature followed a rule of five with five groups nested hierarchically Some had attempted a rule of four but Johann Jakob Kaup 1803 1873 insisted that the number five was special noting that other natural entities such as the senses also came in fives He followed this idea and demonstrated his view of the order within the crow family Where he failed to find five genera he left a blank insisting that a new genus would be found to fill these gaps These ideas were replaced by more complex maps of affinities in works by Hugh Edwin Strickland and Alfred Russel Wallace 44 45 A major advance was made by Max Furbringer in 1888 who established a comprehensive phylogeny of birds based on anatomy morphology distribution and biology This was developed further by Hans Gadow and others 46 47 The Galapagos finches were especially influential in the development of Charles Darwin s theory of evolution His contemporary Alfred Russel Wallace also noted these variations and the geographical separations between different forms leading to the study of biogeography Wallace was influenced by the work of Philip Lutley Sclater on the distribution patterns of birds 48 Quinarian system of bird classification by Swainson For Darwin the problem was how species arose from a common ancestor but he did not attempt to find rules for delineation of species The species problem was tackled by the ornithologist Ernst Mayr who was able to demonstrate that geographical isolation and the accumulation of genetic differences led to the splitting of species 49 50 Early ornithologists were preoccupied with matters of species identification Only systematics counted as true science and field studies were considered inferior through much of the 19th century 51 In 1901 Robert Ridgway wrote in the introduction to The Birds of North and Middle America that There are two essentially different kinds of ornithology systematic or scientific and popular The former deals with the structure and classification of birds their synonymies and technical descriptions The latter treats of their habits songs nesting and other facts pertaining to their life histories This early idea that the study of living birds was merely recreation held sway until ecological theories became the predominant focus of ornithological studies 3 42 The study of birds in their habitats was particularly advanced in Germany with bird ringing stations established as early as 1903 By the 1920s the Journal fur Ornithologie included many papers on the behaviour ecology anatomy and physiology many written by Erwin Stresemann Stresemann changed the editorial policy of the journal leading both to a unification of field and laboratory studies and a shift of research from museums to universities 51 Ornithology in the United States continued to be dominated by museum studies of morphological variations species identities and geographic distributions until it was influenced by Stresemann s student Ernst Mayr 52 In Britain some of the earliest ornithological works that used the word ecology appeared in 1915 53 The Ibis however resisted the introduction of these new methods of study and no paper on ecology appeared until 1943 42 The work of David Lack on population ecology was pioneering Newer quantitative approaches were introduced for the study of ecology and behaviour and this was not readily accepted For instance Claud Ticehurst wrote Sometimes it seems that elaborate plans and statistics are made to prove what is commonplace knowledge to the mere collector such as that hunting parties often travel more or less in circles Ticehurst 42 David Lack s studies on population ecology sought to find the processes involved in the regulation of population based on the evolution of optimal clutch sizes He concluded that population was regulated primarily by density dependent controls and also suggested that natural selection produces life history traits that maximize the fitness of individuals Others such as Wynne Edwards interpreted population regulation as a mechanism that aided the species rather than individuals This led to widespread and sometimes bitter debate on what constituted the unit of selection 49 Lack also pioneered the use of many new tools for ornithological research including the idea of using radar to study bird migration 54 Birds were also widely used in studies of the niche hypothesis and Georgii Gause s competitive exclusion principle Work on resource partitioning and the structuring of bird communities through competition were made by Robert MacArthur Patterns of biodiversity also became a topic of interest Work on the relationship of the number of species to area and its application in the study of island biogeography was pioneered by E O Wilson and Robert MacArthur 49 These studies led to the development of the discipline of landscape ecology A mounted specimen of a red footed falcon John Hurrell Crook studied the behaviour of weaverbirds and demonstrated the links between ecological conditions behaviour and social systems 49 55 56 Principles from economics were introduced to the study of biology by Jerram L Brown in his work on explaining territorial behaviour This led to more studies of behaviour that made use of cost benefit analyses 57 The rising interest in sociobiology also led to a spurt of bird studies in this area 49 58 The study of imprinting behaviour in ducks and geese by Konrad Lorenz and the studies of instinct in herring gulls by Nicolaas Tinbergen led to the establishment of the field of ethology The study of learning became an area of interest and the study of bird songs has been a model for studies in neuroethology The study of hormones and physiology in the control of behaviour has also been aided by bird models These have helped in finding the proximate causes of circadian and seasonal cycles Studies on migration have attempted to answer questions on the evolution of migration orientation and navigation 49 The growth of genetics and the rise of molecular biology led to the application of the gene centered view of evolution to explain avian phenomena Studies on kinship and altruism such as helpers became of particular interest The idea of inclusive fitness was used to interpret observations on behaviour and life history and birds were widely used models for testing hypotheses based on theories postulated by W D Hamilton and others 49 The new tools of molecular biology changed the study of bird systematics which changed from being based on phenotype to the underlying genotype The use of techniques such as DNA DNA hybridization to study evolutionary relationships was pioneered by Charles Sibley and Jon Edward Ahlquist resulting in what is called the Sibley Ahlquist taxonomy These early techniques have been replaced by newer ones based on mitochondrial DNA sequences and molecular phylogenetics approaches that make use of computational procedures for sequence alignment construction of phylogenetic trees and calibration of molecular clocks to infer evolutionary relationships 59 60 Molecular techniques are also widely used in studies of avian population biology and ecology 61 Rise to popularity Edit The use of field glasses or telescopes for bird observation began in the 1820s and 1830s with pioneers such as J Dovaston who also pioneered in the use of bird feeders but instruction manuals did not begin to insist on the use of optical aids such as a first class telescope or field glass until the 1880s 62 63 Page from an early field guide by Florence Augusta Merriam Bailey The rise of field guides for the identification of birds was another major innovation The early guides such as those of Thomas Bewick two volumes and William Yarrell three volumes were cumbersome and mainly focused on identifying specimens in the hand The earliest of the new generation of field guides was prepared by Florence Merriam sister of Clinton Hart Merriam the mammalogist This was published in 1887 in a series Hints to Audubon Workers Fifty Birds and How to Know Them in Grinnell s Audubon Magazine 52 These were followed by new field guides 64 from the pioneering illustrated handbooks of Frank Chapman ornithologist to the classic Field Guide to the Birds by Roger Tory Peterson in 1934 including the Birds from the West Indies published in 1936 by Dr James Bond ornithologist the same who inspired the amateur ornithologist Ian Fleming in naming his immortal literary spy 65 The interest in birdwatching grew in popularity in many parts of the world and the possibility for amateurs to contribute to biological studies was soon realized As early as 1916 Julian Huxley wrote a two part article in The Auk noting the tensions between amateurs and professionals and suggested the possibility that the vast army of bird lovers and bird watchers could begin providing the data scientists needed to address the fundamental problems of biology 66 67 The amateur ornithologist Harold F Mayfield noted that the field was also funded by non professionals He noted that in 1975 12 of the papers in American ornithology journals were written by persons who were not employed in biology related work 68 Organizations were started in many countries and these grew rapidly in membership most notable among them being the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds RSPB in Britain and the Audubon Society in the US which started in 1885 Both these organizations were started with the primary objective of conservation The RSPB born in 1889 grew from a small Croydon based group of women including Eliza Phillips Etta Lemon Catherine Hall and Hannah Poland Calling themselves the Fur Fin and Feather Folk the group met regularly and took a pledge to refrain from wearing the feathers of any birds not killed for the purpose of food the ostrich only exempted The organization did not allow men as members initially avenging a policy of the British Ornithologists Union to keep out women 40 Unlike the RSPB which was primarily conservation oriented the British Trust for Ornithology was started in 1933 with the aim of advancing ornithological research Members were often involved in collaborative ornithological projects These projects have resulted in atlases which detail the distribution of bird species across Britain 4 In Canada citizen scientist Elsie Cassels studied migratory birds and was involved in establishing Gaetz Lakes bird sanctuary 69 In the United States the Breeding Bird Surveys conducted by the US Geological Survey have also produced atlases with information on breeding densities and changes in the density and distribution over time Other volunteer collaborative ornithology projects were subsequently established in other parts of the world 70 Techniques EditThe tools and techniques of ornithology are varied and new inventions and approaches are quickly incorporated The techniques may be broadly dealt under the categories of those that are applicable to specimens and those that are used in the field but the classification is rough and many analysis techniques are usable both in the laboratory and field or may require a combination of field and laboratory techniques Collections Edit Main article Bird collections Bird preservation techniques The earliest approaches to modern bird study involved the collection of eggs a practice known as oology While collecting became a pastime for many amateurs the labels associated with these early egg collections made them unreliable for the serious study of bird breeding To preserve eggs a tiny hole was made and the contents extracted This technique became standard with the invention of the blow drill around 1830 40 Egg collection is no longer popular however historic museum collections have been of value in determining the effects of pesticides such as DDT on physiology 71 72 Museum bird collections continue to act as a resource for taxonomic studies 73 Morphometric measurements of birds are important in systematics The use of bird skins to document species has been a standard part of systematic ornithology Bird skins are prepared by retaining the key bones of the wings legs and skull along with the skin and feathers In the past they were treated with arsenic to prevent fungal and insect mostly dermestid attack Arsenic being toxic was replaced by less toxic borax Amateur and professional collectors became familiar with these skinning techniques and started sending in their skins to museums some of them from distant locations This led to the formation of huge collections of bird skins in museums in Europe and North America Many private collections were also formed These became references for comparison of species and the ornithologists at these museums were able to compare species from different locations often places that they themselves never visited Morphometrics of these skins particularly the lengths of the tarsus bill tail and wing became important in the descriptions of bird species These skin collections have been used in more recent times for studies on molecular phylogenetics by the extraction of ancient DNA The importance of type specimens in the description of species make skin collections a vital resource for systematic ornithology However with the rise of molecular techniques establishing the taxonomic status of new discoveries such as the Bulo Burti boubou Laniarius liberatus no longer a valid species and the Bugun liocichla Liocichla bugunorum using blood DNA and feather samples as the holotype material has now become possible Other methods of preservation include the storage of specimens in spirit Such wet specimens have special value in physiological and anatomical study apart from providing better quality of DNA for molecular studies 74 Freeze drying of specimens is another technique that has the advantage of preserving stomach contents and anatomy although it tends to shrink making it less reliable for morphometrics 75 76 In the field Edit The study of birds in the field was helped enormously by improvements in optics Photography made it possible to document birds in the field with great accuracy High power spotting scopes today allow observers to detect minute morphological differences that were earlier possible only by examination of the specimen in the hand 77 A bird caught in a mist net The capture and marking of birds enable detailed studies of life history Techniques for capturing birds are varied and include the use of bird liming for perching birds mist nets for woodland birds cannon netting for open area flocking birds the bal chatri trap for raptors 78 decoys and funnel traps for water birds 79 80 A researcher measures a wild woodpecker The bird s right leg has a metal identification tag The bird in the hand may be examined and measurements can be made including standard lengths and weights Feather moult and skull ossification provide indications of age and health Sex can be determined by examination of anatomy in some sexually nondimorphic species Blood samples may be drawn to determine hormonal conditions in studies of physiology identify DNA markers for studying genetics and kinship in studies of breeding biology and phylogeography Blood may also be used to identify pathogens and arthropod borne viruses Ectoparasites may be collected for studies of coevolution and zoonoses 81 In many cryptic species measurements such as the relative lengths of wing feathers in warblers are vital in establishing identity A California condor marked with wing tagsCaptured birds are often marked for future recognition Rings or bands provide long lasting identification but require capture for the information on them to be read Field identifiable marks such as coloured bands wing tags or dyes enable short term studies where individual identification is required Mark and recapture techniques make demographic studies possible Ringing has traditionally been used in the study of migration In recent times satellite transmitters provide the ability to track migrating birds in near real time 82 Techniques for estimating population density include point counts transects and territory mapping Observations are made in the field using carefully designed protocols and the data may be analysed to estimate bird diversity relative abundance or absolute population densities 83 These methods may be used repeatedly over large timespans to monitor changes in the environment 84 Camera traps have been found to be a useful tool for the detection and documentation of elusive species nest predators and in the quantitative analysis of frugivory seed dispersal and behaviour 85 86 In the laboratory Edit Many aspects of bird biology are difficult to study in the field These include the study of behavioural and physiological changes that require a long duration of access to the bird Nondestructive samples of blood or feathers taken during field studies may be studied in the laboratory For instance the variation in the ratios of stable hydrogen isotopes across latitudes makes establishing the origins of migrant birds possible using mass spectrometric analysis of feather samples 87 These techniques can be used in combination with other techniques such as ringing 88 The first attenuated vaccine developed by Louis Pasteur for fowl cholera was tested on poultry in 1878 89 Anti malarials were tested on birds which harbour avian malarias 90 Poultry continues to be used as a model for many studies in non mammalian immunology 91 Studies in bird behaviour include the use of tamed and trained birds in captivity Studies on bird intelligence and song learning have been largely laboratory based Field researchers may make use of a wide range of techniques such as the use of dummy owls to elicit mobbing behaviour and dummy males or the use of call playback to elicit territorial behaviour and thereby to establish the boundaries of bird territories 92 An Emlen funnel is used to study the orientation behaviour of migratory birds in a laboratory Experimenters sometimes place the funnel inside a planetarium to study night migration Studies of bird migration including aspects of navigation orientation and physiology are often studied using captive birds in special cages that record their activities The Emlen funnel for instance makes use of a cage with an inkpad at the centre and a conical floor where the ink marks can be counted to identify the direction in which the bird attempts to fly The funnel can have a transparent top and visible cues such as the direction of sunlight may be controlled using mirrors or the positions of the stars simulated in a planetarium 93 The entire genome of the domestic fowl Gallus gallus was sequenced in 2004 and was followed in 2008 by the genome of the zebra finch Taeniopygia guttata 94 Such whole genome sequencing projects allow for studies on evolutionary processes involved in speciation 95 Associations between the expression of genes and behaviour may be studied using candidate genes Variations in the exploratory behaviour of great tits Parus major have been found to be linked with a gene orthologous to the human gene DRD4 Dopamine receptor D4 which is known to be associated with novelty seeking behaviour 96 The role of gene expression in developmental differences and morphological variations have been studied in Darwin s finches The difference in the expression of Bmp4 have been shown to be associated with changes in the growth and shape of the beak 97 98 The chicken has long been a model organism for studying vertebrate developmental biology As the embryo is readily accessible its development can be easily followed unlike mice This also allows the use of electroporation for studying the effect of adding or silencing a gene Other tools for perturbing their genetic makeup are chicken embryonic stem cells and viral vectors 99 Collaborative studies Edit Summer distribution and abundance of Canada goose using data from the North American Breeding Bird Surveys 1994 2003 With the widespread interest in birds use of a large number of people to work on collaborative ornithological projects that cover large geographic scales has been possible 100 101 These citizen science projects include nationwide projects such as the Christmas Bird Count 102 Backyard Bird Count 103 the North American Breeding Bird Survey the Canadian EPOQ 104 or regional projects such as the Asian Waterfowl Census and Spring Alive in Europe These projects help to identify distributions of birds their population densities and changes over time arrival and departure dates of migration breeding seasonality and even population genetics 105 The results of many of these projects are published as bird atlases Studies of migration using bird ringing or colour marking often involve the cooperation of people and organizations in different countries 106 Applications EditMain articles Bird strike and Bird conservation Wild birds impact many human activities while domesticated birds are important sources of eggs meat feathers and other products Applied and economic ornithology aim to reduce the ill effects of problem birds and enhance gains from beneficial species Red billed queleas are a major agricultural pest in parts of Africa The role of some species of birds as pests has been well known particularly in agriculture Granivorous birds such as the queleas in Africa are among the most numerous birds in the world and foraging flocks can cause devastation 107 108 Many insectivorous birds are also noted as beneficial in agriculture Many early studies on the benefits or damages caused by birds in fields were made by analysis of stomach contents and observation of feeding behaviour 109 Modern studies aimed to manage birds in agriculture make use of a wide range of principles from ecology 110 Intensive aquaculture has brought humans in conflict with fish eating birds such as cormorants 111 Large flocks of pigeons and starlings in cities are often considered as a nuisance and techniques to reduce their populations or their impacts are constantly innovated 112 113 Birds are also of medical importance and their role as carriers of human diseases such as Japanese encephalitis West Nile virus and influenza H5N1 have been widely recognized 114 115 Bird strikes and the damage they cause in aviation are of particularly great importance due to the fatal consequences and the level of economic losses caused The airline industry incurs worldwide damages of an estimated US 1 2 billion each year 116 Many species of birds have been driven to extinction by human activities Being conspicuous elements of the ecosystem they have been considered as indicators of ecological health 117 They have also helped in gathering support for habitat conservation 118 Bird conservation requires specialized knowledge in aspects of biology and ecology and may require the use of very location specific approaches Ornithologists contribute to conservation biology by studying the ecology of birds in the wild and identifying the key threats and ways of enhancing the survival of species 119 Critically endangered species such as the California condor have had to be captured and bred in captivity Such ex situ conservation measures may be followed by reintroduction of the species into the wild 120 See also EditAvian ecology field methods Bird observatory List of birdwatchers List of ornithological societies List of ornithologists List of ornithologists abbreviated names List of ornithology awards List of ornithology journalsReferences Edit Newton Alfred Lydekker Richard Roy Charles S Shufeldt Robert W 1896 A dictionary of birds London A and C Black Newton Ian 1998 Population limitation in birds Academic Press p 2 ISBN 978 0 12 517366 7 a b Mayr E 1984 Commentary The Contributions of Ornithology to Biology BioScience 34 4 250 255 doi 10 2307 1309464 JSTOR 1309464 a b Bibby Colin J 2003 Fifty years of Bird Study Capsule Field ornithology is alive and well and in the future can contribute much more in Britain and elsewhere Bird Study 50 3 194 210 doi 10 1080 00063650309461314 S2CID 87377120 Sutherland W J Newton Ian and Green Rhys 2004 Bird ecology and conservation a handbook of techniques Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 852086 3 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Harper Douglas ornithology Online Etymology Dictionary a b Gurney JH 1921 Early annals of ornithology Nature 108 2713 268 Bibcode 1921Natur 108 268 doi 10 1038 108268a0 hdl 2027 coo 31924090299532 S2CID 4033666 Anker Jean 1979 Bird books and bird art Springer Science pp 1 5 Nadel K D Ehud Weiss Orit Simchoni Alexander Tsatskin Avinoam Danin and Mordechai 2004 Stone Agehut in Israel yields world s oldest evidence of bedding PDF Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 101 17 6821 6826 Bibcode 2004PNAS 101 6821N doi 10 1073 pnas 0308557101 PMC 404215 PMID 15090648 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Newton Alfred 1884 Ornithology Reprinted from Encyclopaedia Britannica 9th Ed S l s n Newton Alfred 1893 1896 A Dictionary of Birds Adam amp Charles Black London Hawaiian bird names birdinghawaii co uk Archived from the original on 4 June 2009 Retrieved 11 June 2008 Gill Frank amp Wright M 2006 Birds of the world Recommended English Names Princeton University Press Archived from the original on 2008 10 20 Retrieved 2007 12 13 Mahawar M M amp D P Jaroli 2007 Traditional knowledge on zootherapeutic uses by the Saharia tribe of Rajasthan India Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine 3 1 25 doi 10 1186 1746 4269 3 25 PMC 1892771 PMID 17547781 Shapiro M Native bird names Richmond Audubon Society Archived from the original on 2007 08 16 Retrieved 2007 12 01 Hohn E O 1973 Mammal and bird names in the Indian languages of the Lake Athabasca area PDF Arctic 26 2 163 171 doi 10 14430 arctic2912 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Funk E M amp Irwin M R 1955 Hatching 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Phylogeny and Classification of Birds A Study in Molecular Evolution by Charles G Sibley and Jon E Ahlquist Auk 108 4 990 994 Slack K E Delsuc F Mclenachan P A Arnason U amp D Penny 2007 Resolving the root of the avian mitogenomic tree by breaking up long branches PDF Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 42 1 1 13 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 561 5255 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2006 06 002 PMID 16854605 Archived from the original PDF on 2007 11 30 Retrieved 2007 11 30 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Sorenson M D Payne RB 2002 Molecular Genetic Perspectives on Avian Brood Parasitism Integr Comp Biol 42 2 388 400 doi 10 1093 icb 42 2 388 PMID 21708732 Allen D E 1967 J Dovaston a Pioneer of Field Ornithology Journal of the Society for the Bibliography of Natural History 4 6 280 doi 10 3366 jsbnh 1967 4 6 277 Hollerbach Anne Larsen 1996 Of Sangfroid and Sphinx Moths Cruelty Public Relations and the Growth of Entomology 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Archived from the original PDF on 2010 06 12 Retrieved 2010 08 29 Manwell Reginald D 1949 Malaria birds and war American Scientist 37 1 60 68 JSTOR 9773656 PMID 18123477 Davison Fred Bernd Kaspers amp Karel Schat Eds 2008 Avian Immunology Academic Press ISBN 978 0 12 370634 8 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Slater P J B 2003 Fifty years of bird song research a case study in animal behaviour Animal Behaviour 65 4 633 639 doi 10 1006 anbe 2003 2051 S2CID 53157104 Emlen S T amp Emlen J T 1966 A technique for recording migratory orientation of captive birds Auk 83 3 361 367 doi 10 2307 4083048 JSTOR 4083048 Zebra finch genome assembly release The songbird genome sequencing project 6 Aug 2008 Archived from the original on 5 August 2009 Retrieved 7 May 2009 Hebert PD Stoeckle MY Zemlak TS Francis CM 2004 Identification of Birds through DNA Barcodes PLOS Biology 2 10 e312 doi 10 1371 journal pbio 0020312 PMC 518999 PMID 15455034 Fidler AE van Oers K Drent PJ Kuhn S Mueller JC Kempenaers B 2007 Drd4 gene polymorphisms are associated with personality variation in a passerine bird Proc Biol Sci 274 1619 1685 91 doi 10 1098 rspb 2007 0337 PMC 1914334 PMID 17472912 Abzhanov Arhat Protas Meredith Grant Peter R Tabin Clifford J 2004 Bmp4 and morphological variation of beaks in Darwin s finches Science 305 5689 1462 1465 Bibcode 2004Sci 305 1462A doi 10 1126 science 1098095 PMID 15353802 S2CID 17226774 Bonneaud Camille Burnside Joan amp Edwards Scott V 2008 High speed developments in avian genomics PDF BioScience 58 7 587 595 doi 10 1641 B580706 S2CID 17239411 Stern Claudio D January 2005 The chick a great model system becomes even greater Dev Cell 8 1 9 17 doi 10 1016 j devcel 2004 11 018 PMID 15621526 Cooper Caren B Dickinson Janis Phillips Tina Bonney Rick 2007 Citizen science as a tool for conservation in residential ecosystems Ecology and Society 12 2 11 doi 10 5751 ES 02197 120211 Greenwood J J D 2007 Citizens science and bird conservation PDF Journal of Ornithology 148 1 77 124 doi 10 1007 s10336 007 0239 9 S2CID 21914046 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 19 Wing L 1947 Christmas census summary 1900 1939 State College of Washington Pullman Mimeograph Great Backyard Bird Count Etude des populations d oiseaux du Quebec oiseauxqc org Project PigeonWatch EURING Coordinated bird ringing in Europe Euring org Retrieved on 2013 02 22 Elliott Clive C H 2006 Bird population explosions in agroecosystems the quelea Quelea quelea case history PDF Acta Zoologica Sinica 52 554 560 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Jaegar Michael amp William A Erickson 1980 Levels of bird damage to Sorghum in the Awash basin of Ethiopia and the effects of the control of Quelea nesting colonies Proceedings of the 9th Vertebrate Pest Conference Kalmbach E R 1934 Field observation in economic ornithology PDF The Wilson Bulletin 46 2 73 90 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Ormerod S J amp A R Watkinson 2000 Editors Introduction Birds and Agriculture The Journal of Applied Ecology 37 5 699 705 doi 10 1046 j 1365 2664 2000 00576 x Glahn James F Kristin E Brugger 1995 The Impact of Double Crested Cormorants on the Mississippi Delta Catfish Industry A Bioenergetics Model Colonial Waterbirds 18 1 168 175 doi 10 2307 1521537 JSTOR 1521537 Geis Aelred D 1976 Effect of building design and quality on nuisance bird problems Proceedings of the 7th Vertebrate Pest Conference a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Belant Jerrold L Paul P Woronecki Richard Dolbeer amp Thomas W Seamans 1998 Ineffectiveness of Five Commercial Deterrents for Nesting Starlings Wildlife Society Bulletin 26 2 264 268 JSTOR 3784047 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Factsheet on Avian Influenza CDC 2017 04 13 Reed K D Jennifer K Meece James S Henkel amp Sanjay K Shukla 2003 Birds Migration and Emerging Zoonoses West Nile Virus Lyme Disease Influenza A and Enteropathogens Clin Med Res 1 1 5 12 doi 10 3121 cmr 1 1 5 PMC 1069015 PMID 15931279 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Allan J Orosz A 2001 The Costs of Birdstrikes to Commercial Aviation Proceedings of Birdstrike 2001 Joint Meeting of Birdstrike Committee USA Canada Calgary Alberta a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Gregory R D Noble D Field R Marchant J Raven M Gibbons D W 2003 Using birds as indicators of biodiversity PDF Ornis Hung 12 13 11 24 Archived from the original PDF on 2008 12 27 Retrieved 2009 05 09 Bock Carl E 1997 The Role of Ornithology in Conservation of the American West The Condor 99 1 1 6 doi 10 2307 1370218 JSTOR 1370218 BirdLife International 2000 Threatened Birds of the World The official source for birds on the IUCN Red List Lynx Edicions Barcelona and BirdLife International Cambridge UK ISBN 978 0946888399 Whitfort Harriet L amp Robert J Young 2004 Trends in the captive breeding of threatened and endangered birds in British zoos 1988 1997 Zoo Biology 23 1 85 89 doi 10 1002 zoo 10122 Additional sources EditBirkhead T Wimpenny J Montgomerie B 2014 Ten Thousand Birds Ornithology since Darwin Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691151977 Chansigaud Valerie 2009 History of Ornithology London New Holland Publishers ISBN 978 1 84773 433 4 Gurney John Henry 1921 Early annals of ornithology Nature 108 2713 268 Bibcode 1921Natur 108 268 doi 10 1038 108268a0 hdl 2027 coo 31924090299532 S2CID 4033666 Retrieved 19 November 2010 Newton Alfred 1884 Ornithology S l s n Reprinted from the 1884 Encyclopaedia Britannica Podulka Sandy Eckhardt Marie Otis Daniel 2001 Birds and Humans A Historical Perspective In Podulka Sandy Rohrbaugh Ronald W Bonney Rick eds Handbook of Bird Biology 2nd ed Ithaca NY Cornell Lab of Ornithology pp H1 H42 ISBN 978 0 938027 62 1 Walters Michael 2005 A Concise History of Ornithology New Haven CT Yale University Press ISBN 978 1 84773 433 4 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ornithology Lewis Daniel The Feathery Tribe Robert Ridgway and the Modern Study of Birds Yale University Press 1 Ornithologie 1773 1792 Francois Nicholas Martinet Digital Edition Smithsonian Digital Libraries West Midland Bird Club Older Organisations Archived from the original on May 9 2013 Retrieved May 23 2004 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link History of ornithology in North America History of ornithology and ornithology collections in Victoria Australia on Culture Victoria History of ornithology in China Hill ornithology collections Portals Birds Zoology Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ornithology amp oldid 1142125643, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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