• Welcome to BirdForum, the internet's largest birding community with thousands of members from all over the world. The forums are dedicated to wild birds, birding, binoculars and equipment and all that goes with it.

    Please register for an account to take part in the discussions in the forum, post your pictures in the gallery and more.
ZEISS DTI thermal imaging cameras. For more discoveries at night, and during the day.

Difference between revisions of "Dictionary M-O" - BirdForum Opus

m (→‎M: typo)
m (typo)
Line 29: Line 29:
 
'''Monotypic''': a taxon that is not subdivided. For example the [[Hoatzin]] is a monotypic species because there are no accepted division in subspecies. It is also the only member of its genus ''[[: Category:Opisthocomus|Opisthocomus]]'' which therefore is a monotypic genus. ''Opisthocomus'' is the only member of the monotypic family [[: Category:Opisthocomidae|Opisthocomidae]]. The opposite is Polytypic.  
 
'''Monotypic''': a taxon that is not subdivided. For example the [[Hoatzin]] is a monotypic species because there are no accepted division in subspecies. It is also the only member of its genus ''[[: Category:Opisthocomus|Opisthocomus]]'' which therefore is a monotypic genus. ''Opisthocomus'' is the only member of the monotypic family [[: Category:Opisthocomidae|Opisthocomidae]]. The opposite is Polytypic.  
  
'''Morph''': usually used about discrete, reproducible color variants that occur within the same population of a species; also known as color phase. Examples are plenty, such as dark and pale forms of [[Booted Eagle]], many of the [[: Category:Megascops|Screech Owls]] of the Americas occurring in grey, brown, and red forms, or in the pale vs dark bellied forms of [[Parasitic Jaeger]]. In many cases, the designation is used even if a few intermediate birds are known. Some resources will state that it is inappropriate to use the word morph is the variation is determined by sex, age, season, feather wear, etc. However, the form [[Dictionary D-F#D|sexually dimorphic]] is often used to describe variation determined by the sex of the bird. See also monomorphic (above) and [[Dictionary P-S#P|polymorphic]]
+
'''Morph''': usually used about discrete, reproducible color variants that occur within the same population of a species; also known as color phase. Examples are plenty, such as dark and pale forms of [[Booted Eagle]], many of the [[: Category:Megascops|Screech Owls]] of the Americas occurring in grey, brown, and red forms, or in the pale vs dark bellied forms of [[Parasitic Jaeger]]. In many cases, the designation is used even if a few intermediate birds are known. Some resources will state that it is inappropriate to use the word morph if the variation is determined by sex, age, season, feather wear, etc. However, the form [[Dictionary D-F#D|sexually dimorphic]] is often used to describe variation determined by the sex of the bird. See also monomorphic (above) and [[Dictionary P-S#P|polymorphic]]
  
 
'''Moult''' (US, '''Molt'''): the shedding of old, worn-out feathers and growth of new feathers. Understanding the progress and timing of moults is very important in determining the age, and sometimes the identity, of a bird; successive moults may bring in markedly differing plumage patterns and colours. Many birds have two moults per year, typically a complete moult (all feathers replaced) after breeding (in the late summer in temperate zones), and a partial moult (body feathers replaced, but not wing or tail feathers) before breeding (in the early spring in temperate zones). Some birds only have one moult per year, while others can have two full moults, or one full and two or more partial moults. A few birds, notably larger [[: Category:Accipitridae|raptors]] and other large soaring birds, have more-or-less continuous slow wing moults, so as not to impair their flying ability.
 
'''Moult''' (US, '''Molt'''): the shedding of old, worn-out feathers and growth of new feathers. Understanding the progress and timing of moults is very important in determining the age, and sometimes the identity, of a bird; successive moults may bring in markedly differing plumage patterns and colours. Many birds have two moults per year, typically a complete moult (all feathers replaced) after breeding (in the late summer in temperate zones), and a partial moult (body feathers replaced, but not wing or tail feathers) before breeding (in the early spring in temperate zones). Some birds only have one moult per year, while others can have two full moults, or one full and two or more partial moults. A few birds, notably larger [[: Category:Accipitridae|raptors]] and other large soaring birds, have more-or-less continuous slow wing moults, so as not to impair their flying ability.

Revision as of 07:13, 1 August 2014

This section is aimed at explaining the bird and biology specific vocabulary you are likely to meet in other threads in Birdforum.

This page is divided into several sections: Dictionary A-C, Dictionary D-F, Dictionary G-L, Dictionary M-O, Dictionary P-S and Dictionary T-Z.

M

Machair: a Gaelic word describing a habitat rarely found outside of the Western Islands of Scotland and in Ireland. It consists of low-lying grassland, rich in wild flowers growing on peat, covered with windblown sand and broken shells. This is one of the rarest habitats in Europe and is important for breeding waders and wintering waterfowl.

Malar: malar stripe, see Heads

Mandibles: the two parts of the bill/beak, if used in singular, most often as lower mandible; see also Beaks

Maxilla: another name for the upper mandible = the upper half of the bill.

Melanism, melanistic: an abnormality where there is darkening of all parts of a bird, both feathers and bare parts (bill and legs). The full version of melanism would produce a completely black bird. Eurasian Blackbird is not melanistic because it has a yellow eye ring and bill (and because the black plumage only occurs in the male anyway). The opposite of melanism is albinism. See also "Partial albinism" and "Leucism".

Migration: regular, usually seasonal movements that usually take a species between a breeding area and an area for passing a period of time that would be less hospitable in the breeding range. Such movements can be along a north-south direction in many parts of the world, but in the tropics there are plenty of examples where migration happens from higher breeding grounds to lower non-breeding areas, and a third possibility is regular movements driven by rainfall variation (a semi-desert that receives rainfall during a set time of the year can be a good breeding ground during and after that rainfall but inhospitable the rest of the year). See also Nomadism, nomadic. See reference 2 for more information.

Migratory navigation: plenty of stories exist about long distance migrants that return to the same breeding territory for two or more years. How birds do that is not fully known, but one common idea is that they have a migration program (inherited or learned) and that one important aspect of their navigation is the use of a compass. Three different compasses seem to exist and be used in birds: magnetic compass, solar compass, and a stellar compass; if one of these dominate and calibrate the other compasses is an area of active research and discussion[1]. The magnetic compass could be of a simple type that basically measures a north-south direction, or it could be a more advanced inclination compass that can measure how far below the horizon that the magnetic north is; it is still unknown how the birds sense this, but a location near or in the eyes for their sensory mechanism seems probable. The solar compass in addition to the obvious effects can rely on polarized light, because near sunset and sunrise (and to a lesser extent the rest of the day), there will be a band of increased light intensity going north-south over the sky if you are sensitive to polarized light, which at least some birds seems to be. The stellar compass is fairly simple in that the north star is a constant and the rest of the sky rotate relatively to that point (a similar argument can be made for the south pole of the night sky).

Molt: See Moult, below.

Monogamous: A mating system used by many birds where one individual has only one mate for at least one breeding season. There is a distinction between socially monogamous and genetically monogamous. In socially monogamous species, "cheating" is quite common i.e., that each litter is comprised of offspring fathered by more than one male while genetically monogamous species actually have one mother and one father for all offspring in a breeding season. In temperate regions, it is quite common to see socially monogamous species, while genetically monogamous species are more common in the tropics. Many other mating systems exists, especially in the tropics but also to some extent in the temperate regions.

Monomorphic, monomorphism: strictly speaking, this means that all members of a population/subspecies/species belongs to the same morph (see below for that term). For example, the Whiskered Screech Owl subspecies aspergus which occurs in e.g., Arizona only occurs in a grey form, while the other two subspecies have both grey and red morphs. Monomorphic is also used with the modifier "sexual" to describe a species where male and female are quite similar looking, often in contrast to other similar species that show sexual dimorphism (compare Barbados Bullfinch to Lesser Antillean Bullfinch.

drawing by njlarsen

Monophyly, monophyletic: a group containing all members of a Clade (opposite is paraphyletic). In the illustration, an ancestral bird gave rise to species A, B, and C, so a group containing all three would be monoplyletic, but a group containing only A and C would be paraphyletic. At genus and higher levels of taxonomy, there is wide agreement that taxons should be monophyletic; at the species level, there is difference of opinions.

Monotypic: a taxon that is not subdivided. For example the Hoatzin is a monotypic species because there are no accepted division in subspecies. It is also the only member of its genus Opisthocomus which therefore is a monotypic genus. Opisthocomus is the only member of the monotypic family Opisthocomidae. The opposite is Polytypic.

Morph: usually used about discrete, reproducible color variants that occur within the same population of a species; also known as color phase. Examples are plenty, such as dark and pale forms of Booted Eagle, many of the Screech Owls of the Americas occurring in grey, brown, and red forms, or in the pale vs dark bellied forms of Parasitic Jaeger. In many cases, the designation is used even if a few intermediate birds are known. Some resources will state that it is inappropriate to use the word morph if the variation is determined by sex, age, season, feather wear, etc. However, the form sexually dimorphic is often used to describe variation determined by the sex of the bird. See also monomorphic (above) and polymorphic

Moult (US, Molt): the shedding of old, worn-out feathers and growth of new feathers. Understanding the progress and timing of moults is very important in determining the age, and sometimes the identity, of a bird; successive moults may bring in markedly differing plumage patterns and colours. Many birds have two moults per year, typically a complete moult (all feathers replaced) after breeding (in the late summer in temperate zones), and a partial moult (body feathers replaced, but not wing or tail feathers) before breeding (in the early spring in temperate zones). Some birds only have one moult per year, while others can have two full moults, or one full and two or more partial moults. A few birds, notably larger raptors and other large soaring birds, have more-or-less continuous slow wing moults, so as not to impair their flying ability.

References_M

  1. Rabøl, J (2010). Orientation by passerine birds under conflicting magnetic and stellar conditions: no calibration in relation to the magnetic field. DOFT 104(3):85-102
  2. Der Falke: Bird Migration. Special issue translated into English. See this birdforum thread: Link

N

Nail: see Beaks

Nest parasite: see Brood parasite

Common Buzzard with its nictating membrane in front of the eye
Photo by Shirley Roulston

Nictating membrane: a third eye-lid that is a fully or partially transparent membrane which can be pulled across the eye from front to back. It tends to be fully transparent in diving birds, and they will use this to cover their eye when diving. Other birds may use this membrane to moisten the eye or to remove debris (to what degree such uses are assumed vs based on data is unclear). [1].

Nidicole, Nidicolous: A bird that is born naked and with closed eyes (so synonymous with Altricial). Nidicolous is the adjective of that.

Nidifuge, Nidifugous: nidifuge is a hatchling that is able to move around and most often feed itself (so synonymous with Precocial). Nidifugous is the adjective of that.

Nocturnal: a species that is active during the night. Many of these actually start their activity at dusk and may still be active at dawn (such as Barn Owl in the UK), while others are strictly nocturnal.

Nomadism, nomadic: birds of nomadic species make movements that are not regular (contra Migration) but are instead driven by irregular availability of food, for example following rare but strong rainfall such as occur in the Australian outback. Example species could be Princess Parrot and several others.

References_N

  1. Birdforum thread showing an example of a nictating membrane
  2. Abstract of paper discussing the transparent nictating membrane in waterbirds

O

Ocellus, Ocelli: Eye-like spot(s) such as those found in Indian Peafowl.

Omnivorous: eats several different kinds of food, for example both fruits and invertebrates.

Orbital ring: a ring around the eye consisting of naked skin, see Beaks. Some birds have a ring of differently coloured feathers around the eye, this is the eye-ring.


This page is divided into several sections: Dictionary A-C, Dictionary D-F, Dictionary G-L, Dictionary M-O, Dictionary P-S and Dictionary T-Z.

Back
Top