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The bill of a scavenger—the Griffon Vulture.
The bill of a domesticated Chinese goose. The knob is highly exaggerated by farm selection.
The bill of the Greater Flamingo.
The beak of a Brown Falcon.
The beak of an African Penguin.
The long white beak of a Long-billed Corella is used to dig for roots and seeds.
The beak of a Catalina Macaw

The beak, bill or rostrum is an external anatomical structure of birds which is used for eating and for grooming, manipulating objects, killing prey, probing for food, courtship and feeding young. The term also refers to a similar mouthpart in some monotremes, cephalopods, cetaceans, pufferfishes, turtles, Anuran tadpoles and sirens.

Comparison of bird beaks, displaying different shapes adapted to different feeding methods. Not to scale.

Contents

[edit] Anatomy

Beaks vary significantly in size and shape from species to species. The beak is composed of an upper jaw, called the maxilla, and a lower jaw, called the mandible. The jaw is made of bone, typically hollow or porous to conserve weight for flying. The outside surface of the beak is covered by a thin horny sheath of keratin called the rhamphotheca. Between the hard outer layer and the bone is a vascular layer containing blood vessels and nerve endings. The rhamphotheca can include knob, which is found above the beak of some swans, such as the Mute Swan, and some domesticated Chinese geese (pictured).

The beak has two holes called nares (nostrils) which connect to the hollow inner beak and thence to the respiratory system.[1] The nares are usually directly above the beak. In some birds, they are in a fleshy, often waxy structure at the base of the beak called the cere (from Latin cera, meaning wax). The cere is an indicator of the reproductive cycle of budgerigars. [2]

Petrels and albatrosses have external horny sheaths called naricorns that protect the nares. These are separately placed on either side of the base of the upper mandible in albatrosses, but fused, with an internal septum, on the top of the base of the upper mandible in petrels.[3]. In the mallard, and perhaps in other ducks, there is no cere, and the nostrils are in the hard part of the beak, as a soft cere would be liable to injury when the duck dredges for food among submerged debris and stones.

On some birds, the tip of the beak is hard, dead tissue used for heavy-duty tasks such as cracking nuts or killing prey. On other birds, such as ducks, the tip of the bill is sensitive and contains nerves, for locating things by touch. The beak is worn down by use, so it grows continually throughout the bird's life.

[edit] Uses of beaks

Beaks may be used to poke, bite, grasp, maim, stab, caw, slash, pierce, tweet, call, ingest, warn and hook onto.

[edit] Billing

A fledgeling Common Starling shows the interior of its bill.

During courtship, mated pairs of a variety of bird species touch and clasp each other's bills. This is called billing and appears to strengthen the pair bond (Terres, 1980). Gannets raise their bills high and repeatedly clatter them (pictured); the male puffin nibbles at the female's beak; the male waxwing puts his bill in the female's mouth; and ravens hold each other's beaks in a prolonged "kiss".

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  • Gilbertson, Lance; Zoology Lab Manual; McGraw Hill Companies, New York; ISBN 0-07-237716-X (fourth edition, 1999)
  • Terres, John. K. The Audubon Society Encyclopedia of North American Birds, New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1980. ISBN 0-394-46651-9



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