THIS PAGE HAS BEEN MODIFIED FOR OUR CLASS FROM ONE OF GARY RITCHISON'S WEB PAGES AT EASTERN KENTUCKY UNIVERSITY!
[Birds
seen during field labs 2004]
[HOME PAGE][Lab
Information]
| Long: the bill is much longer than the head, as in a Sword-billed Hummingbird (Ensifera ensifera). |
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| Short: the bill is much shorter than the head, as in a redpoll. |
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| Hooked: the upper mandible is longer than the lower, and its tip is bent over the tip of the lower, as in a hawk. |
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| Crossed: the tips of the mandibles cross each other, as in a crossbill. |
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| Compressed: the bill for a good part of its length is higher than wide, as in a puffin |
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| Depressed: the bill is wider than high, as in a duck. |
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| Stout: the bill is conspicuously high and wide, as in a Gray Partridge. |
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| Terete: the bill is generally circular either in cross-section, or when viewed anteriorly, as in a hummingbird. |
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| Straight: the line along which the mandibles close is in line with the axis of the head, as in a Great Blue Heron |
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| Recurved: the bill curves upward
(e.g., American Avocet) . |
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| Decurved: the bill curves downward, as in the Brown Creeper |
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| Bent: the bill is deflected at an angle (usually deflected downward at the middle), as in a flamingo. |
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| Swollen: the sides of the mandibles are convex, as in a tanager |
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| Acute: the bill tapers to a sharp point, as in the Blue-winged Warbler |
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| Chisel-like: the tip of the bill
is beveled (e.g., Hairy Woodpecker) |
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| Toothed: the upper mandibular tomium has a "tooth," as in a falcon |
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| Serrate: the bill has saw-like tomia, as in a merganser. |
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| Gibbous: the bill has a pronounced hump, as in a White-winged Scoter. |
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| Spatulate, or spoon-shaped: the bill is much widened, or depressed, towards its tip (e.g., Northern Shoveler) | |
| Notched: the bill has a slight nick
in the tomia of one or both mandibles. Most frequently the notch occurs near
the tip of the upper mandible, as in thrushes (like the American Robin). |
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| Conical: the bill has the shape of a cone, as in a White-crowned Sparrow. |
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| Lamellate, or sieve-billed: the mandibles have just within their tomia a series of transverse tooth-like ridges, as in swans, geese, ducks, & flamingoes. |
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| Angulated commissure: the commissure forms a sharp angle at the point where the tomium proper meets the rictus (e.g., Evening Grosbeak) |
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| With gular sac: the chin, gular region, and jugulum are distended, as in a pelican. |
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