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Ornithology is a zoological science that studies those creatures
belonging to the Class Aves, much better known as birds. Birds,
the only vertebrates that have feathers, are generally divided
into two major groups. Ostriches, emus, and kiwis are
ratites, birds that lack that conspicuous keel-like extension
on the breast bone and lack the ability to fly. The vast majority
of the birds, however, are non-ratites and possess the keel
to which the powerful muscles that power the wings are attached.
All-in-all, there are over 9200 extant species of birds divided
into 30 orders and 174 families. Their ability to fly has
allowed them to colonize every land mass on earth including
the Arctic and Antarctic and some, like the penguins, have
adapted an aquatic lifestyle coming to shore only to breed
and raise young.
Fossil evidence of the ancestors of modern birds indicates
that they were contemporaneous with dinosaurs. Indeed, evidence
is mounting that these feathered creatures are in fact the
highly evolved living incarnation of the terrible lizards.
This long evolutionary history has allowed for the development
of the many unique morphological, physical and behavioral
attributes in birds that make the science of ornithology such
an interesting vocation.
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