BEAK OF BIRDS Class – IV SUB :- EVS Jainendra Chouhan

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Can you identify these birds by their beaks?
Advertisements

Extreme Beaks! A look at some adaptations that help birds get the food they need. A Windows to the Universe presentation to accompany the Adaptation Investigation.
Bird Beaks & Their Uses.
Predators and Prey of the Chihuahuan Desert
Structural/Physical Adaptations
Animals and their teeth
Adaptations &You!.
In the summer, when the sun is burning hot. The sparrows,doves and sun bird have started working in pairs as they prepare to make their nests. In.
ADAPTATIONS BIRD BEAKS.
Animals and Their Body Parts
BIRDS!.
Birds, The Physics of Bird Flight, and Mammals
by Nathan 1. Birds Hatching How They Hatch Care of Young 2. Birds of Prey Weapons Body.
Birds: The Best Beak A look into the adaptations that help get birds the food they need. An LSU Museum of Natural Science presentation to accompany the.
Finding food 4 How is a Lanner falcon’s beak adapted for what it eats?
Birds Class IV Prepared By :- Dhirender Kumar K V 1, Ambala.
Chapter 4 Section 1 and 2. Introduction 1861:  Hermann von Meyer found a fossil imprint of a feather  A month later he found a skeleton surrounded by.
Bird Adaptations Zoology.
Whole Class Review Activity
Bird Adaptations.
Adaptations are special characteristics that plants or animals have. These characteristics make it easier for them to survive. For example, penguins have.
Habitat and Adaptations
DID YOU EVER WONDER WHY SO MANY BIRD BEAKS? Do people have a variety of mouths or teeth for eating? Why or why not?
Bird Beak Adaptations. Eagle To tear the flesh of animals To tear the flesh of animals.
ADAPTATION Isma M. Shaff.
Chapter 15.1b Birds.
Birds and Mammals. Determine which characteristic is common to birds or mammals or both. Mouth usually has teeth Mammal.
Bird Identification.
Birds I. Bird Characteristics 1. forelimbs modified into wings 2. hindlimbs modified for swimming, walking or perching. 3. Feathers 4. Warmblooded.
Beak Morphology Advanced Biology – Spring Beaks.
FEATURES OF BIRDS. Flight feathers Body feathers Down feathers.
Science Birds By: Avery M. & Jacob R.. BIRD BEAKS Nut Cracking Beak - The pointed tip pulls pieces of shell away Fish Spearing – The long narrow beak.
Heredity Adaptations in traits found in Birds
Dear bird lovers did you know how bird beaks help them survive in the wild well I’m going to tell you why By Liana.
Ch. 6 How animals stay alive
Birds’ Facts Together With Birds.
Adaptations of Birds.
Bird Adaptations: Beaks
Structure and Function. How do the structures of these eyes help the animal function better?
Bird Adaptations Zoology. Review  What is one thing birds have that no other animal has?  Feathers!  What are modified bird forelimbs called?  Wings!
UNIDAD 7 Biodiversity and the history of life on Earth BIRDS’ BEAKS Natural Science 1. Secondary Education.
Let’s take a look at some birds and the adaptations that help them get the food they need to survive.
BIRDS. WHAT IS A BIRD?  Birds can maintain a constant internal body temperature. They have feathers, two legs covered with scales used for walking or.
Camouflage and Beak Design October 20 & 21. Protective Coloration  Also known as camouflage, protective coloration helps an organism to hide in its environment.
Birds and Mammals Pages and The Birds! Pgs
The Digestive System.
Bird Beak Cafe. A bird's beak is basically a lightweight, bony elongation of its skull. The beak is covered with skin that produces keratin, the same.
Teeth. Tooth Decay Cleaning your teeth Bacteria feed on food left on your teeth and make acid which corrode the teeth.
Adaptations are traits that help an organism survive in its environment. Animal Adaptations.
Beaks ,feet &claws of Birds
Birds (Class: Aves) Birds apparently evolved from reptiles
Ch-7 The Crane and The Crab
Bird Stations.
Predators and Prey of the Chihuahuan Desert
Bird Adaptations - Beaks
A BUSY MONTH --about birds IV STD EVS.
Bird Beaks & Their Uses.
Chapter 19, Lesson 4 How Animals Get and Digest Food
Birds with Probing beaks
Can you identify these birds by their beaks?
Bird Beaks & Their Uses.
For the Elementary Classroom
N4 Biology Unit 3 Life on Earth KA 3.5 Adaptations for survival
North American Wildlife
A look at some adaptations that help birds get the food they need.
BIRD BEAK ADAPTATIONS I wonder what they eat???.
Bird Beaks & Their Uses.
A look at some adaptations that help birds get the food they need.
Presentation transcript:

BEAK OF BIRDS Class – IV SUB :- EVS Jainendra Chouhan K. V. No. – 1, AFS Jodhpur

Hummingbirds have long, tubular bills that resemble straws, which they use to sip nectar from flowers

Woodpecker

Woodpeckers have strong beaks which taper to the tip, forming a chisel for pecking holes in trees for food or nests. Most feed on insects which live under the bark.

The edges of a Mallard's bill are fringed to filtering out animal or plant material from the water. The combs on the sides of the bill catch the food which is then removed with the tongue and swallowed.

Flamingo

Flamingos feed in much the same way as ducks, by taking in a mouthful of water, closing the bill, and forcing the water out by pushing with their tongue. Small shrimps and other animals are caught in the comb-like structures on the sides of the bill.

A cone shaped bill is found in many birds such as finches and grosbeaks. It is a strong beak used for cracking seeds.

Blue-winged Warbler,

Thin, slender, pointed beaks are found mainly in insect eaters Thin, slender, pointed beaks are found mainly in insect eaters. They are used to pick insects off leaves, twigs, and bark. This warbler is a good example.

Merganser

Mergansers (a diving fish eating duck) specialized for eating fish, have sharp tooth-like structures on the edge of the bill to hold fish tightly.

Hawks, owls, and other birds of prey which catch and kill live prey have sharp, "hooked" beaks. These are used to bite the skull or neck and also to tear the body into pieces small enough to swallow.

Since birds have no teeth they either swallow the food whole, or bite, crack, or tear it into bite-sized pieces. They often hold the food with their feet as they work at it with the bill. Birds prepare the food before eating by removing hulls from seeds or inedible parts from prey. Instead of chewing their food, they swallow it in pieces and it is ground up in their gizzard. The gizzard is a muscular organ just past the stomach. It has a hard, ridged inner surface. Birds swallow sand, and small stones. These stay in the gizzard and are ground against the food to break it up.

Skimmer

The Skimmer, has probably one of the strangest bills The Skimmer, has probably one of the strangest bills. They feed by flying just above the surface of the water with the open knife-like lower jaw cutting through the water. When a fish is encountered the jaw snaps shut.

Flycatcher

Beaks which are flat and wide at the base are found in birds which catch insects in flight, such as flycatchers. These birds also often have whiskers at the corners of the mouth, which effectively widens the mouth opening, allowing more effective capture of prey.

Long-billed Curlew

This Long-billed Curlew, like other shorebirds, has a long narrow bill for probing in mud and sand for insects and worms. The tip of the bill is very sensitive so the bird can feel when it touches its food. In some of these birds the tip of the bill can open to grab the food even when the rest of the bill stays shut.

that each bird eats on the right. What's for Dinner? Draw a line from each bird beak on the left to the type of food that each bird eats on the right. WH

Beaks to Eats Activity

I. Match the bird's beak with the kind of food it eats CURVY BEAKS I. Match the bird's beak with the kind of food it eats ________1. Hammering into trees ________2. Grabbing small animals ________3. Cracking seeds ________4. Straining food from the lake bottom ________5. Sipping nectar from flowers

Find and circle the birds that do not have hooked beaks Find and circle the birds that do not have hooked beaks. If successful, you will have found the non-raptors hanging out with those curvy beaked birds of prey!