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Why don't birds get pregnant?

To: bird <>
Subject: Why don't birds get pregnant?
From: brian fleming <>
Date: Wed, 14 Jun 2006 16:21:23 +1000
I believe that birds lay eggs rather than having an internal pregnancy, because
1. they are descandants of dinosaurs which laid eggs and
2. like so much else in birds, it is a necessity enforced by flight. (Modern flightless birds are descendants of birds which flew). Birds have given up many things, including jawbones and teeth, in order to reduce the flight-load. 'External' development of young means that the brooding parent does not have to move about carrying a heavy internal load as mammalian parents have to (and as a mother and grandmother I can assure any doubters that this can seriously impede brisk movement). (I dont imply that they did this on purpose; just shorthand for saying that this is the result of evolutionary and natural selection processes).

Many modern reptiles, such as the Bluetongue Lizard, and many snakes, give birth to live young - technically they are ovoviviparous because they retain the eggs inside and the young for some time after they 'hatch, while the young are still being nourished by the yolk-sac attached to the stomach.

With eggs, though they require parental care, they are produced only one at a time until a full clutch is achieved and incubation commences; this is less of a strain and a burden on the gravid female than a whole litter at once as in mammals such as pigs or dogs. If the clutch is discovered by a predator, or overtaken by accident, very often the brooding bird can escape and produce another set of eggs. The size of the bird's clutch can be adapted to nutrients available. Raptors of course start incubation with the first egg - leading to a succession of ages and sizes of young through the clutch. If it's a good season, most will survive. If not, the 'surplus' younger ones are likely to be eaten or just out-competed by their elder siblings. And if anyone wants to ask about flightless birds, it's no accident that so many have arisen from flyong ancestors on oceanic islands, where in addition to not needing flight in a predator-free environment, possession of flight is downright disadvantageous - the flying bird is much more likely than the flightless to be blown off the island and perish during storms and cyclones.

Anthea Fleming
in Ivanhoe
wishing I could evolve a fur-coat on this chilly day.




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