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Interesting
Bird Facts
Some
interesting facts about birds:
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The oldest bird was known
as an Archaeopteryx and lived about 150 million years ago. It was the size of
a raven, was covered with feathers, and had wings.
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The most yolks ever found
in a single chicken's egg is nine.
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An ostrich egg needs to
be boiled for 2 hours to get a hard-boiled egg.
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The Royal Albatross' eggs
take 79 days to hatch.
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The egg of the
hummingbird is the world's smallest bird's egg; the egg of the ostrich, the
world's largest.
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The now-extinct elephant
bird of Madagascar
laid an egg that weighed 27 pounds.
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Precocial birds like
chickens, ostriches, ducks, and seagulls hatch ready to move around. They come
from eggs with bigger yolks than altricial birds like owls, woodpeckers, and
most small songbirds that need a lot of care from parents in order to survive.
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Air sacs may make up 1/5
of the body volume of a bird.
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A bird's normal body
temperature is usually 7-8 degrees hotter than a human's. Up to three-quarters
of the air a bird breathes is used just for cooling down since they are unable
to sweat.
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A bird's heart beats 400
times per minute while resting and up to 1000 beats per minute while flying.
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The world's only wingless
bird is the kiwi of
New Zealand.
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Migrating ducks and geese
often fly in V-shape formations. Each bird flies in the upwash of its
neighbor's beating wings and this extra bit of supporting wind increases lift,
thereby saving energy.
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Pigeons can reach speeds
up to 100 mph.
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Swifts, doves, falcons,
and sandpipers can approach 200 mph.
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Penguins, ostriches, and
dodo birds are all birds that do not fly.
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Hummingbirds eat about
every ten minutes, slurping down twice their body weight in nectar every day.
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The homing pigeon, Cher
Ami, lost an eye and a leg while carrying a message in World War I. Cher Ami
won the Distinguished Service Cross. Its leg was replaced with a wooden leg.
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The only known poisonous
bird in the world is the hooded pitohui of
Papua,
New Guinea. The poison is found in its skin and feathers.
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The American turkey
vulture helps human engineers detect cracked or broken underground fuel pipes.
The leaking fuel smells like vulture food (they eat carrion), and the
clustered birds show repair people where the lines need fixing.
References and Further Reading
Rupp, R.
Everything You Never Learned About Birds. Storey Communications, Inc. Pownal,
Vermont; 1995.


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