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July 6, 2008 9:33:02 AM CDT


Stories related to: birds

Stories

17 Stories

  • June 2008
    • Study Rewrites Birds' Family Tree

      Study Rewrites Birds' Family Tree

      A five-year study of bird DNA is turning the world of ornithology on its head. The study revealed such drastic new information about the evolution of birds that dozens will need new scientific names, the Chicago Sun-Times reports. Notable finds: Falcons are not related to hawks or eagles; hummingbirds—colorful daytime creatures—evolved from the drab nocturnal nightjar; and parrots are more closely related to songbirds than thought. More »

    • Condors Pulled From Calif. Fires

      Condors Pulled From Calif. Fires

      Wildfires in Northern California spurred the rescue of eight California condors from their Monterey County refuge, the San Francisco Chronicle reports. The unusual operation was performed by a US Coast Guard helicopter crew after a wildlife organization said that the fires threatened the condor sanctuary. The birds were taken to another preserve nearby. There are only 315 California condors in existence. More »

  • May 2008
    • Polly Wanna Get Home: Here's My Address

      Polly Wanna Get Home: Here's My Address

      A vet in Japan was stumped on how to reunite a lost parrot with its owners—until the brainy bird told him his address and his owner's name. The well-trained African gray has been safely reunited with his human family, the BBC reports. The bird kept mum in police custody but got chatty when it was sent to an animal clinic, calling out greetings and even belting out a few hit tunes. More »

    • Diving Pelican Leaves Swimmer in Stitches

      Diving Pelican Leaves Swimmer in Stitches

      A swimmer in Florida needed 20 stitches to her face after a pelican diving for a fish slammed into her. The big bird died in the collision near Tampa. "It was like I got punched in the face, super hard. Blood was gushing out," said the Ohio housecleaner who was on vacation. It was the first known case of such an encounter, officials said. Pelicans weigh as much as 30 pounds and dive from heights of 70 feet. More »

    • Pandemic Risk Real, Mounting

      Pandemic Risk Real, Mounting

      The danger of a worldwide bird flu epidemic is growing as the virus becomes established in the avian population, Reuters reports. World Health Organization experts today urged all nations to prepare in case the H5N1 virus mutates into a form easily transferable between humans. In birds, the strain has spread across Asia, Africa, and parts of Europe. More »

    • Baby Birds' Babbling Suggests Intricate Brain

      Baby Birds' Babbling Suggests Intricate Brain

      Being bird-brained might not be much of an insult: New MIT research paints a more intricate portrait of how songbirds learn to sing, with one part of the brain used for learning and another for singing itself. Rather than maturing from babbling to birdsong, the independent but overlapping pathways work together during different life stages. More »

    • 'Magnet Molecule' May Guide Bird Migration

      'Magnet Molecule' May Guide Bird Migration

      Migrating birds may rely on a special molecule discovered in their eyes that allows them to  perceive the Earth’s magnetic field lines as a kind of road map, new research shows. The molecule may help birds navigate much the same way humans follow lines to stay on a highway lane, said the study in the journal Nature .  More »

  • April 2008
    • Tyrannosaurus Rex: Tastes Like Chicken?

      Tyrannosaurus Rex: Tastes Like Chicken?

      Dinosaurs are more closely related to birds than reptiles, protein extracted from a Tyrannosaurus rex bone suggests. T. rex collagen, the main protein in bones, is similar to chicken and ostrich collagen but much different than material from alligators and lizards, scientists say. The findings could remap the evolutionary tree according to molecular data rather than bone structure, the Washington Post reports. More »

  • March 2008
    • Swan-Boat Romance Takes Wing (Again)

      Swan-Boat Romance Takes Wing (Again)

      After her real-life avian lover flew the coop, a German black swan has returned to her ex—a swan-shaped paddleboat, the AP reports. Petra was joined at the wing with the craft in 2006—but that relationship seemed to have sung its swan song when both were taken to a zoo for the winter—where she dumped it for a real male. More »

    • 'Extinct' Bird Flies Again

      'Extinct' Bird Flies Again

      The Beck’s petrel, a bird last seen in the 1920s and long thought extinct, appears to be very much alive, the AP reports. Spurred by unconfirmed sightings in Australia two years ago, an Israeli ornithologist set out for a group of islands off Papua New Guinea and brought back hard evidence: photos of about 30 of the birds (cousin to the albatross) and even the remains of one found at sea. More »

  • January 2008
    • When Bird Meets Plane, Air Force Takes Action

      When Bird Meets Plane, Air Force Takes Action

      When a bird smacks into a military plane, it is not a pretty picture, neither for bird nor plane. It is, however, a serious, if messy, problem, and one that jeopardizes the safety of pilots and some very expensive Air Force hardware. The Wall Street Journal visits a base in Afghanistan and provides a glimpse of how the Air Force is fighting back—a process that involves methodically scraping up bird remains and shipping them to the Smithsonian. More »

  • November 2007
    • Polly Wanna $10K Reward? Find Franklin

      Polly Wanna $10K Reward? Find Franklin

      He answers to Franklin, talks with a Brooklyn accent, and does a mean impersonation of a truck backing up. Find the missing parrot and it's worth $10,000 to his distraught Manhattan owners. They put up the bounty when their beloved African grey was stolen from a pet boarding shop last week, the New York Post reports. More »

  • August 2007
    • Puffin Love Flies High in Maine

      Puffin Love Flies High in Maine

      Puffin-love is flying high in Maine, where hundreds of these penguin look-a-likes are lured by wooden decoys and given 24-hour protection, the AP reports. Supervisors endure screeching gulls and pooping dive-bombers to protect these finned waddlers and their nests. So just what are puffins? Birds that look like penguins, but live on the other end of the world and can fly as well as swim. More »

    • No Bird Brains, Crows Reveal 'Human-Like' Reasoning

      No Bird Brains, Crows Reveal 'Human-Like' Reasoning

      Crows on a South Pacific island showed human-like reasoning in solving a complex problem that required two tools, according to a study. The birds used a short twig to access a longer twig which could then be used to reach a treat. "What's most amazing is that most of them did this on the first trial," a researcher told the BBC.  More »

  • June 2007
    • Giant Penguin Fossils Found in Peruvian Desert

      Giant Penguin Fossils Found in Peruvian Desert

      Penguins haven't always lived on ice, scientists have concluded after unearthing fossils of giant penguins in Peru's Atacama desert. The penguins, nearly human-sized at 4.5 feet tall, had extraordinarily long beaks apparently used for spearfishing, and waddled the earth some 36 million years ago, the National Geographic News reports . More »

    • Big Bird Dazzles Paleontologists

      Big Bird Dazzles Paleontologists

      The largest birdlike creature on record stood over 16 feet tall, weighed a ton and a half, and had sharp claws but no teeth. The Chinese paleontologist who unearthed the creature's thigh bone wasn't sure what it was, he tells the San Francisco Chronicle, but as he listed the possibilities for a colleague he realized: "We have a gigantic chicken!" More »

  • May 2007
    • West Nile Turns Down Volume on Songbirds

      West Nile Turns Down Volume on Songbirds

      The West Nile virus is responsible for a major decline in North American bird populations, and the sudden quiet speaks volumes to environmental scientists. Beyond a lack of birdsong, a new National Zoo study reports, the decimation signals far-reaching ecological problems that have emerged since the mosquito-borne virus appeared on the continent in 1999. More »

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