Gonys - Definition. Was ist Gonys
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Was (wer) ist Gonys - definition

EXTERNAL ANATOMICAL STRUCTURE FOUND IN BIRDS, NON-AVIAN DINOSAURS AND SOME MAMMALS
Cere; Beaks; Rhamphotheca; Gape; Billing (birds); Culmen (bird); Culmen ridge; Rictal bristle; Bird's beak; Gape flange; Gonys; Tomia; Rhinotheca; Gnathotheca; Operculum (bird); Gonydeal expansion; Gonydeal angle; Gonydeal spot; Nail (beak); Bill tip organ; Bird's mouth; Beaked; Culmen (beak)
  • This [[Arctic tern]] chick still has its egg tooth, the small white projection near the tip of its upper mandible.
  • Comparison of bird beaks, displaying different shapes adapted to different feeding methods. Not to scale.
  • alt=an owl's skull with the beak attached
  • A [[gull]]'s upper mandible can flex upwards because it is supported by small bones which can move slightly backwards and forwards.
  • The gape flange on this juvenile [[house sparrow]] is the yellowish region at the base of the beak.
  • The beaks of the now-extinct [[Huia]] (female upper, male lower) show marked sexual dimorphism
  • The nail is the black tip of this [[mute swan]]'s beak.
  • A bird's culmen is measured in a straight line from the tip of the beak to a set point — here, where the feathering starts on the bird's forehead.<ref name="Pyle"/>
  • The sawtooth serrations on a [[common merganser]]'s bill help it to hold tight to its fish prey.
  • When billing, [[northern gannet]]s raise their beaks high and clatter them against each other.
  • Position of [[vomer]] (shaded red) in neognathae (left) and paleognathae (right)
  •  The [[rock dove]]'s operculum is a mass at the base of the bill.
  • The [[platypus]] uses its bill to navigate underwater, detect food, and dig. The bill contains receptors that help detect prey.
  • alt=Head of a black and white bird with a large dark eye. Its hooked beak is gray with a black tip and its round nostril has a small lump in the center.
  • The gapes of juvenile altricial birds are often brightly coloured, as in this [[common starling]].
  • Kiwi]]s have a probing bill that allows them to detect motion
  • Three [[barn owl]]s threatening an intruder. Barn owl threat displays usually include hissing and bill-snapping, as here

Gonys         
·noun The keel or lower outline of a bird's bill, so far as the mandibular rami are united.
Rhinotheca         
·noun The sheath of the upper mandible of a bird.
gape         
v. (D; intr.) to gape at

Wikipedia

Beak

The beak, bill, or rostrum is an external anatomical structure found mostly in birds, but also in turtles, non-avian dinosaurs and a few mammals. A beak is used for eating, preening, manipulating objects, killing prey, fighting, probing for food, courtship, and feeding young. The terms beak and rostrum are also used to refer to a similar mouth part in some ornithischians, pterosaurs, cetaceans, dicynodonts, anuran tadpoles, monotremes (i.e. echidnas and platypuses, which have a beak-like structure), sirens, pufferfish, billfishes and cephalopods.

Although beaks vary significantly in size, shape, color and texture, they share a similar underlying structure. Two bony projections – the upper and lower mandibles – are covered with a thin keratinized layer of epidermis known as the rhamphotheca. In most species, two holes called nares lead to the respiratory system.