نتایج جستجو برای: decomposing feathers

تعداد نتایج: 9893  

Journal: :Animal : an international journal of animal bioscience 2016
K M Hartcher P H Hemsworth S J Wilkinson P C Thomson G M Cronin

Severe feather-pecking (SFP) persists as a highly prevalent and detrimental behavioural problem in laying hens (Gallus gallus domesticus) worldwide. The present experiment investigated the association between feather-eating and plumage damage, a consequence of SFP, in groups of free-range, ISA Brown laying hens. Single feathers were placed on the floor of the home pens. Feathers were sourced fr...

2010
JUAN M. PERALTA-SANCHEZ ANDERS P. MØLLER JUAN J. SOLER

Many bird species use feathers as lining material, and its functionality has traditionally been linked to nest insulation. However, nest lining feathers may also influence nest detection by predators, differentially affect reproductive investment of mates in a post-mating sexual selection process, and affect the bacterial community of the nest environment. Most of these functions of nest lining...

Journal: :Nature 2001

2015
Péter L. Pap Gergely Osváth José Miguel Aparicio Lőrinc Bărbos Piotr Matyjasiak Diego Rubolini Nicola Saino Csongor I. Vágási Orsolya Vincze Anders Pape Møller Alexandre Roulin

Sexual selection and aerodynamic forces affecting structural properties of the flight feathers of birds are poorly understood. Here, we compared the structural features of the innermost primary wing feather (P1) and the sexually dimorphic outermost (Ta6) and monomorphic second outermost (Ta5) tail feathers of barn swallows (Hirundo rustica) from a Romanian population to investigate how sexual s...

Journal: :The Journal of experimental zoology 1999
R O Prum

Avian feathers are a complex evolutionary novelty characterized by structural diversity and hierarchical development. Here, I propose a functionally neutral model of the origin and evolutionary diversification of bird feathers based on the hierarchical details of feather development. I propose that feathers originated with the evolution of the first feather follicle-a cylindrical epidermal inva...

Journal: :Comput. Graph. Forum 2002
Lisa Streit Wolfgang Heidrich

Feathers, unlike other cutaneous appendages such as hair, fur, or scales have a definite structure. Variation in feather structure creates a wide range of resulting appearances. Collectively, feather structure determines the appearance of the feather coat, which can largely affect the resulting look of a feathered object (bird). In this paper we define the structure of individual feathers using...

Journal: :The Journal of veterinary medical science 2009
Yu YAMAMOTO Kikuyasu NAKAMURA Manabu YAMADA Toshihiro ITO

We examined whooper swans naturally infected with avian influenza virus (H5N1) to evaluate the possible zoonotic risk of swan feathers. Viruses were isolated from feather calami. Immunohistochemical testing revealed that virus antigens were present in the feather epidermis and feather follicle wall epidermis of some feathers. RT-PCR and genetic sequencing using paraffin sections of swan feather...

2005
Riccardo Stradi

McGraw et al. (2004) have recently presented evidence that barn swallow (Hirundo rustica) feathers from the forehead and throat do not contain carotenoids, and melanins are the determinants of their chestnut coloration. This contradicts evidence I presented in a book entitled The colour of flight: carotenoids in bird plumage (Stradi, 1995, 1998), where a tridimensional high-performance liquid c...

Journal: :Current Biology 2012
Nicholas R. Longrich Jakob Vinther Qingjin Meng Quangguo Li Anthony P. Russell

In modern birds (Neornithes), the wing is composed of a layer of long, asymmetrical flight feathers overlain by short covert feathers. It has generally been assumed that wing feathers in the Jurassic bird Archaeopteryx and Cretaceous feathered dinosaurs had the same arrangement. Here, we redescribe the wings of the archaic bird Archaeopteryx lithographica and the dinosaur Anchiornis huxleyi and...

2014
Author Jocelyn Hudon Dan Derbyshire Tom Flinn JOCELYN HUDON DAN DERBYSHIRE SEABROOKE LECKIE TOM FLINN

—Baltimore Orioles (Icterus galbula) of unusual redness over large sections of their plumages were recently discovered in southeastern Canada. Reddish feathers from six of nine specimens sampled at the McGill Bird Observatory in Ste-Anne-de-Bellevue, Montreal, Quebec in fall 2006 contained rhodoxanthin, a keto-carotenoid of deep red hue usually found in plants. Rhodoxanthin comprised ,5% of car...

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