Dictionary Definition
feather
Noun
2 turning an oar parallel to the water between
pulls [syn: feathering]
Verb
1 join tongue and groove, in carpentry
2 cover or fit with feathers
3 turn the paddle; in canoeing [syn: square]
4 turn the oar, while rowing [syn: square]
5 grow feathers; "The young sparrows are fledging
already" [syn: fledge]
User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
Derived terms
Translations
element of bird wings
- Arabic: (reish)
- Bosnian: pero, perka
- Catalan: ploma
- Chumash: qap
- Czech: péro
- Danish: fjer
- Dutch: veer, veder, pluim
- Erzya: толга (tolga)
- Faroese: fjøður
- Finnish: sulka, höyhen
- French: plume
- German: Feder
- Guarani: ague (t-)
- Gujarati: પીછું (pīchun)
- Hebrew: אברה (evra)
- Hindi: पंख (pankh) , पर (par)
- Hungarian: toll
- Icelandic: fjöður
- Interlingua: pluma, penna
- Italian: piuma
- Kurdish: g Kurdish
- Latin: pluma
- Latvian: spalva
- Norwegian: fjær
- Old English: feþer
- Polish: pióro
- Portuguese: pluma, pena
- Rohingya: fóoir
- Romani: pōr
- Romanian: fulg, pană
- Russian: перо
- Serbian:
- Slovene: pero
- Spanish: pluma
- Swedish: fjäder
- Tok Pisin: gras bilong pisin
- Tupinambá: aba (s-)
- Turkish: tüy
Verb
- To cover with feathers.
- To arrange in the manner or appearance of feathers.
- ambitransitive rowing To rotate the oars while they are out of the water to reduce wind resistance.
- To cut off an aircraft engine, usually in
response to airborne
problem or emergency
- After striking the bird, the pilot feathered the left, damaged engine.
- carpentry engineering To finely shave or bevel an edge
Derived terms
Translations
To cover with feathers
To arrange in the manner of feathers
Rowing: To rotate the oars while they are out of
the water
Aeronautics: To cut of an aircraft engine
Carpentry, Engineering: To finely shave or bevel
an edge
- Danish: skodde italbrac rotate the oars
Extensive Definition
Feathers are one of the epidermal growths that
form the distinctive outer covering, or plumage, on birds. They are the outstanding
characteristic that distinguishes the Class Aves from all other
living groups. Other Theropoda also
had feathers (see Feathered
dinosaurs).
Characteristics
Feathers are among the most complex structural organs found in vertebrates: integumentary appendages, formed by controlled proliferation of cells in the epidermis, or outer skin layer, that produce keratin proteins. The β-keratins in feathers, beaks and claws — and the claws, scales and shells of reptiles — are composed of protein strands hydrogen-bonded into β-pleated sheets, which are then further twisted and crosslinked by disulfide bridges into structures even tougher than the α-keratins of mammalian hair, horns and hoof.Feathers insulate birds from water and cold
temperatures. The individual feathers in the wings and tail play
important roles in controlling flight. These have their own
identity and are not just randomly distributed. Some species have a
crest of
feathers on their heads. Although feathers are light, a bird's
plumage weighs two or three times more than its skeleton, since
many bones are hollow and contain air sacs. Color patterns serve as
camouflage against
predators for birds in
their habitats, and by predators looking for a meal. As with fish,
the top and bottom colors may be different to provide camouflage
during flight. Striking differences in feather patterns and colors
are part of the sexual
dimorphism of many bird species and are particularly important
in selection of mating pairs. The remarkable colors and feather
sizes of some species have never been fully explained.
There are two basic types of feather: vaned
feathers which cover the exterior of the body, and down
feathers which are underneath the vaned feathers. The pennaceous
feathers are vaned feathers. Also called contour feathers,
pennaceous feathers are distributed over the whole body. Some of
them are modified into remiges, the flight
feathers of the wing, and rectrices, the flight feathers of the
tail. A typical vaned feather features a main shaft, called the
rachis. Fused to the
rachis are a series of branches, or barbs; the
barbs themselves are also branched and form the barbules. These
barbules have minute hooks called barbicels for cross-attachment.
Down feathers are fluffy because they lack barbicels, so the
barbules float free of each other, allowing the down to trap much
air and provide excellent thermal insulation. At the base of the
feather, the rachis expands to form the hollow tubular calamus, or
quill, which inserts into
a follicle in
the skin. The Dyck texture
is what causes the colors blue and green in most parrots. This is
due to a texture effect in microscopic portions of the feather
itself, rather than pigment, or the Tyndall
effect as was previously believed. The Dyck texture alters
color produced by pigment. Thus, an albino parrot will be white.
The spectacular red feathers of certain parrots owe their vibrancy
to a rare set of pigments found nowhere else in nature. Albinism
is a rare lack of pigment in some or all of a bird's
feathers.
In some birds, the feather colors may be created
or altered by uropygial gland secretions. The yellow bill colors of
many hornbills are produced by preen gland secretions. Other
differences that may only be visible in the ultraviolet region are
also possible.
A bird's feathers are replaced periodically
during its life through molting. New feathers are formed
through the same follicle from which the old ones were
fledged.
Some birds have a supply of powder down
feathers which grow continuously, with small particles regularly
breaking off from the ends of the barbules. These particles produce
a powder that sifts
through the feathers on the bird's body and acts as a waterproofing
agent and a feather conditioner.
Powder down has evolved independently in several taxa and can be
found in down as well as pennaceous feathers. They may be scattered
in plumage in the pigeons and parrots or in localized patches on
the breast, belly or flanks as in herons and frogmouths. Herons use
their bill to break the feathers and to spread them while cockatoos
may use their head as a powder puff to apply the powder. In one
study, Willow Flycatchers (Empidonax traillii) and they were found
to catch insects equally well before and after removal of the
rictal bristles.
Feathers are not uniformly distributed on the
skin of the bird except in the Penguin. In most
birds the feathers grow from specific tracts of skin called
pterylae while there are regions which are free of feathers called
apterylae. The arrangement of these feather tracts, pterylosis,
varies across bird families.
Evolution
Feathers most likely originated as a filamentous insulation structure, or possibly as markers for mating, with flight emerging only as a secondary purpose. It has been thought that feathers evolved from the scales of reptiles, but recent research suggests that while there is a definite relationship between these structures, it remains uncertain of the exact process. (see Quarterly Review of Biology 77:3 (September 2002): 261-95). In experiments where a virus was used to reduce the levels of certain proteins in chicken embryos, the chickens retained webbed feet, and the scutes developed into feathers. The scales, however, did not develop into feathers, and the research suggests that feathers did not evolve from reptilian scales.Feathered dinosaurs
Several dinosaurs have been discovered with feathers on their limbs that would not have functioned for flight. One theory is that feathers originally developed on dinosaurs as a means of insulation; those small dinosaurs that then grew longer feathers may have found them helpful in gliding, which would have begun the evolutionary process that resulted in some proto-birds like Archaeopteryx and Microraptor zhaoianus. Other dinosaurs discovered with feathers include Pedopenna daohugouensis, Sinosauropteryx, and Dilong paradoxus, a tyrannosauroid which is 60 to 70 million years older than Tyrannosaurus rex. Currently the question is not whether birds are dinosaurs, but whether they are deinonychosaurians or are dromaeosaurids. It has been suggested that Pedopenna is older than Archaeopteryx, however, their age remains doubted by some experts.Human uses
Feathers have a number of utilitarian and cultural and religious uses.Utilitarian functions
Feathers are both soft and excellent at trapping heat; thus, they are sometimes used in high-class bedding, especially pillows, blankets, and mattresses. They are also used as filling for winter clothing, such as quilted coats and sleeping bags; goose down especially has great loft, the ability to expand from a compressed, stored state to trap large amounts of compartmentalized, insulating air. Bird feathers have long been used for fletching arrows and in the past were used for ink pens. Colorful feathers such as those belonging to pheasants have been used to decorate fishing lures and hats. During the 18th, 19th, and even 20th Centuries a booming international trade in plumes, to satisfy market demand in North America and Europe for extravagant head-dresses as adornment for fashionable women, caused so much destruction (for example, to egret breeding colonies) that a major campaign against it by conservationists caused the fashion to change and the market to collapse.Feathers of large birds (most often geese) have been and
are used to make quill
pens. The word pen itself is derived from the Latin penna for
feather. The French nom-de-plume for pen name has a
similar origin.
Cultural and religious uses
Eagle feathers have
great cultural and
spiritual
value to
American Indians in the USA and First
Nations peoples in Canada as religious
objects. In the United States the religious use of eagle and hawk feathers are governed by the
eagle
feather law (50 CFR 22), a federal law limiting the possession
of eagle feathers to certified and enrolled members of federally
recognized Native American tribes.
Various birds and their plumages serve as
cultural icons throughout the world, from the hawk in ancient Egypt
to the bald eagle and the turkey in the United States. In Greek
mythology, Daedelus the inventor and Icarus
tried to escape his prison by attaching feathered wings to his
shoulders with wax, which was melted by the Sun.
References
External links
- McGraw, K. J. 2005. Polly want a pigment? Cracking the chemical code to red coloration in parrots. Australian Birdkeeper Magazine 18:608-611.
- DeMeo, Antonia M. Access to Eagles and Eagle Parts: Environmental Protection v. Native American Free Exercise of Religion (1995) http://www.animallaw.info/articles/ar22hstclq771.htm
- Electronic Code of Federal Regulations (e-CFR), Title 50: Wildlife and Fisheries PART 22—EAGLE PERMITS http://ecfr.gpoaccess.gov/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=ecfr&tpl=/ecfrbrowse/Title50/50cfr22_main_02.tpl
- Stokes, DaShanne. (In Press) Legalized Segregation and the Denial of Religious Freedom
- U.S. v. Thirty Eight Golden Eagles (1986) http://www.animallaw.info/cases/caus649fsupp269.htm
feather in Arabic: ريش
feather in Aymara: Phuyu
feather in Bosnian: Perje
feather in Breton: Plu
feather in Bulgarian: Перо
feather in Catalan: Ploma
feather in Czech: Peří
feather in Danish: Fjer
feather in German: Feder
feather in Spanish: Pluma
feather in Esperanto: Plumo
feather in French: Plume
feather in Scottish Gaelic: Ite
feather in Galician: Pluma
feather in Croatian: Perje
feather in Indonesian: Bulu
feather in Italian: Piuma
feather in Hebrew: נוצה
feather in Lithuanian: Plunksna
feather in Malay (macrolanguage): Bulu
pelepah
feather in Dutch: Veer (vogel)
feather in Japanese: 羽根
feather in Norwegian: Fjær
feather in Occitan (post 1500): Pluma
feather in Polish: Pióro
feather in Portuguese: Pena
feather in Quechua: Phuru
feather in Russian: Перо
feather in Simple English: Feather
feather in Slovak: Perie
feather in Slovenian: Pero
feather in Serbo-Croatian: Perje
feather in Finnish: Höyhen
feather in Swedish: Fjäder (biologi)
feather in Tamil: இறகு
feather in Ukrainian: Пташине перо
feather in Chinese: 羽毛
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
a continental, a curse, a damn, a darn, a hoot,
air, bagatelle, bank, bauble, bead, bean, bejewel, beribbon, bespangle, bibelot, bit, blood, blubber, brand, brass farthing, breed, breeze, bubble, butter, button, cast, catch a crab, ceil, cent, chaff, character, chip, clan, clay, cobweb, color, cork, covert, crab, crest, curio, cushion, cut a crab, denomination, description, designation, diamond, dip, dough, down, dust, eiderdown, engrave, ether, face, fairy, farce, farthing, feather an oar,
feather bed, feathers,
fig, figure, filigree, fill, fishtail, flag, fleabite, fledge, fleece, floss, flounce, flower, flue, fluff, foam, folderol, form, fribble, frippery, froth, fur, fuzz, garland, gaud, gem, genre, genus, gewgaw, gimcrack, give way, gossamer, grain, hackle, hair, halfpenny, hill of beans,
ilk, illuminate, inlay, interline, jest, jewel, joke, kapok, kickshaw, kidney, kin, kind, knickknack, knickknackery, label, line, load, loop, lot, mail, make, manner, mark, minikin, mockery, mold, molehill, mote, nature, number, order, pace, pack, pad, paddle, paint, panache, peppercorn, persuasion, phylum, picayune, pillow, pin, pinch of snuff, pinion, pinprick, plow, plumage, plume, plumule, plush, ply the oar, porpoise, pudding, puff, pull, pull out, pull up, punt, push down, putty, quill, race, rap, red cent, ribbon, roll, row, row away, row dry, row of pins,
rubber, rush, satin, scapular, scull, shape, ship oars, shit, shoot, sideslip, silk, skid, sky an oar, snap, sneeshing, sort, sou, spangle, species, speculum, spin, spiral, sponge, spume, stamp, strain, straw, stripe, stuff, stunt, style, swansdown, the like of, the
likes of, thistledown, tinsel, topknot, toy, tribe, trifle, trinket, triviality, tuft, tuppence, two cents, twopence, type, undulate, variety, velvet, wad, wainscot, wax, whim-wham, wool, wreathe, yaw, zephyr