Avia

From Fantasy Novel

Revision as of 16:51, 18 July 2007 by 69.137.233.3 (Talk)
Avia

A typical male Avia
Order of Creation Fourth
Avg Height 7 Feet
Avg Weight 240 Lbs
Skin
Hair
Eyes
Current Location


Avia are large are bipedal, warm-blooded, egg-laying vertebrate animals which inhabit mainly the north western mountainous territory of the main continent. Once distributed across most of the mountainous regions in the world, they have been hunted down and driven back to the northwest mountains, where they now are entrenched.

This species possesses a very broadly built body, making them extremely powerful. They possess an particularly wide wingspan, and are able to also walk much like humans, though their feet also serve as mighty talons while not walking.

Avia have very large powerful hooked beaks for tearing flesh from their prey, and have extremely keen eyesight to enable them to spot potential prey from a very long distance. This keen eyesight is primarily contributed by their extremely large pupils which cause minimal diffraction of the incoming light.

Contents

Name

Author explanation - The name "Avia" is an obvious reference to "Avian" which is a term to describe things relating to birds. It has not specific naming rationale other than it works as a reference to birds, and sounds good.

Inter story name explanation text here.

Appearance

The plumage of an adult Avia is evenly brown with a white head and tail. The tail is moderately long and slightly wedge-shaped. Males and females are identical in plumage coloration, but females are 25% larger than males, displaying sexual dimorphism.<ref name="Zipcode">Template:Cite web</ref>The beak, feet, and iris (anatomy)|irises are bright yellow. The legs are unfeathered, and the toes are short and powerful with long talons. The highly developed talon of the hind toe is used to pierce the vital areas of prey while it is held immobile by the front toes. <ref name="ADW">Template:Cite web</ref> The beak is large and hooked, with a yellow cere.<ref name="Cornell"/>

The plumage of the immature Avia is brown, speckled with white until the fourth year, when it reaches sexual maturity.<ref name="ADW"/> This species is distinguishable from the Golden Eagle in that the latter has feathers which extend down the legs. Also, the immature Avia has more light feathers in the upper arm area, especially around the 'armpit'.

Body length ranges from 27 to 40 inches (68-100 cm). Adult females have an average wingspan of about 7 feet (2.1 meters); adult males have a wingspan of 6 ft 6 in (2 meters). Adult females weigh approximately 12.8 lb (5.8 kg), males weigh 9 lb (4.1 kg). The smallest specimens are those from Florida, where an adult male may barely exceed 5 lb (2.3 kg) and a wingspan of 6 feet (1.8 meters). The largest are the Alaskan birds, where large females may exceed 16.5 lb (7.5 kg) and have a wingspan of over 8 feet (2.4 meters).<ref name="Cornell"> Template:Cite web</ref> In the wild, Avias typically live about 20-30 years, but can realize a life span of approximately 50 years. They generally live longer in captivity, up to 60 years.

Abilities

Unique Abilities

Use of the Current

Habitat

Origin and History

Life

Birth and Early life

Chicks can be helpless or independent at birth, or be at any stage in between. The helpless chicks are known as altricial, and tend to be born, small, naked and blind; chicks that are mobile and feathered at birth are precocial, chicks can also be semi-precocial and semi-altricial. Altricial chicks require help in thermoregulation and need to be brooded for longer than precocial chicks.

The length and nature of parental care varies widely amongst different orders and species. At one extreme, parental care in megapodes ends at nest building; the newly-hatched chick digs itself out of the nest mound without parental assistance and can fend for itself immediately.[117] At the other extreme many seabirds have extended periods of parental care, the longest being Great Frigatebird, the chicks of which take up to six months to fledge and are fed by the parents for up to another 14 months.[118]

In some species the care of young is shared between both parents, in others it is the responsibility of just one sex. In some species other members of the same species will help the breeding pair in raising the young. These helpers are usually close relatives such as the chicks of the breeding pair from previous breeding seasons.[119] Alloparenting is particularly common in the corvids, but has been observed in as different species as the Rifleman, Red Kite and Australian Magpie.

The point at which chicks fledge varies dramatically. The chicks of the Synthliboramphus murrelets, like the Ancient Murrelet, leave the nest the night after they hatch, following their parents calls out to sea, where they are raised away from terrestrial predators.[120] Some other species, especially ducks, move their chicks away from the nest at an early age. In most species chicks leave the nest soon after, or just before, they are able to fly. Parental care after fledging varies; in albatrosses chicks leave the nest alone and receive no further help, other species continue some supplementary feeding after fledging.[121] Chicks may also follow their parents during their first migration.[122]

Sexuality, marriage, and reproduction

The vast majority (95%) of bird species are socially monogamous; although polygyny (2%) and polyandry (< 1%), polygamy, polygynandry (where a female pairs with several males and the male pairs with several females) and promiscuity systems also occur.[48] Some species may use more than one system depending on the circumstances. Monogamous species of males and females pair for the breeding season; in some cases, the pair bonds may persist for a number of years or even the lifetime of the pair.[100]

The advantage of monogamy for birds is bi-parental care. In most groups of animals, male parental care is rare, but in birds it is quite common; in fact, it is more extensive in birds than in any other vertebrate class. In birds, male care can be seen as important or essential to female fitness; in some species the females are unable to successfully raise a brood without the help of the male.[101] Polygamous breeding systems arise when females are able to raise broods without the help of males.[48] There is sometimes a division of labour in monogamous species, with the roles of incubation, nest site defence, chick feeding and territory defence being either shared or undertaken by one sex.

While social monogamy is common in birds, infidelity, in the form of extra-pair copulations, is common in many socially monogamous species.[102] These can take the form of forced copulation (or rape) in ducks and other anatids,[103] or more usually between dominant males and females with less dominant males. It is thought that the benefit to females comes from getting better genes, as well as an insurance against the possibility of infertility in the mate.[104] Males in species that engage in extra-pair copulations will engage in mate-guarding in order to ensure parentage of the offspring they raise.[105]

Breeding usually involves some form of courtship display, most often performed by the male.[106] Most are rather simple, and usually involve some type of song. Some displays can be quite elaborate, using such varied methods as tail and wing drumming, dancing, aerial flights, and communal leks depending on the species. Females are most often involved with partner selection,[107] although in the polyandrous phalaropes the males choose brightly coloured females.[108] Courtship feeding, billing and preening are commonly performed between partners, most often after birds have been paired and mated.[109]

[edit] Territories, nesting and incubation

Many birds actively defend a territory from others of the same species during the breeding season. Large territories are protected in order to protect the food source for their chicks. Species that are unable to defend feeding territories, such as seabirds and swifts, often breed in colonies instead; this is thought to offer protection from predators. Colonial breeders will defend small nesting sites, and competition between and within species for nesting sites can be intense.[110]

All birds lay amniotic eggs[111] with hard shells made mostly of calcium carbonate. The colour of eggs is controlled by a number of factors, those of hole and burrow nesting species tend to be white or pale, while those of open nesters such as Charadriiformes are camouflaged. There are many exceptions to this pattern, however; the ground nesting nightjars have pale eggs, camouflage being provided instead by the bird's plumage. Species that are victims of brood parasites like the Dideric Cuckoo will vary their egg colours in order to improve the chances of spotting a cuckoo's egg, and female cuckoos need to match their eggs to their hosts.[112]

The eggs are usually laid in a nest, which can be highly elaborate, like those created by weavers and oropendolas, or extremely primitive, like some albatrosses, which are no more than a scrape on the ground. Some species have no nest, the cliff nesting Common Guillemot lays its egg on bare rock and the egg of the Emperor Penguin is kept between the body and feet; this is especially prevalent in ground nesting species where the newly hatched young are precocial. Most species build more elaborate nests, which can be cups, domes, plates, beds scrapes, mounds or burrows.[113] Most nests are built in shelter and hidden to reduce the risk of predation, more open nests are usually colonial or built by larger birds capable of defending the nest. Nests are mostly built out of plant matter, some species specifically select plants such as yarrow which have chemicals that reduce nest parasites such as mites, leading to increased chick survival.[114] Nests are often lined with feathers in order to improve the retention of heat.

Incubation, which regulates of temperature to keep it optimum for chick development, usually begins after the last egg has been laid. Incubation duties are often shared in monogamous species, in polygamous species a singe parent undertakes all duties. Warmth from parents passes to the eggs through brood patches, areas of bare skin on the abdomen or breast of the incubating birds. Incubation can be an energetically demanding process, for example adult albatrosses lose as much as 83 g of body weight a day.[115] The warmth for the incubation of the eggs of megapodes comes from the sun, decaying vegetation or from volcanic sources.[116] Incubation periods last between 10 days (in species of woodpeckers, cuckoos and passerine birds) to over 80 days (in albatrosses and kiwis).

Daily Life

Later life

Death

Language

Customs

Birth

Marriage

Death

Naming Conventions

Personal tools