quill feather - definição. O que é quill feather. Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é quill feather - definição

LONG, STIFF, FEATHERS ON THE WINGS OR TAIL OF A BIRD THAT AID IN THE GENERATION OF LIFT AND THRUST
Rectrices; Remiges; Retrix; Retrices; Retrice; Primary feathers; Rectrice; Remige; Primary feather; Pinion (feather); Rectrix; Remex; Secondaries (birds); Flight feathers; Tertials; Primary-feather; Tertial feather; Flight-feather; Tertiary feathers; Secondary feathers; Quill feather; Primary projection; Tertial feathers; Wing feathers; Secondary flight feather; Primary flight feather; Primary wing feather; Secondary wing feather; Wing formula; Primaries (birds)
  • Bird wing bone structure, indicating attachment points of remiges
  • Primary (left) and secondary (right) feathers of the [[common buzzard]] (''Buteo buteo''); note the asymmetrical orientation of the shafts
  • [[Double-wattled cassowary]], (''Casuarius casuarius'') showing modified remiges
  • [[Eurasian jackdaw]] (''Corvus monedula''), showing moult of central rectrices
  • Leading edge of an owl feather, showing serrations
  • chiffchaff]] (left) and [[willow warbler]]
  • flight]] with primaries spread to decrease drag and improve lift
  • Young [[white-bellied sea eagle]] (''Haliaeetus leucogaster'') in flight, showing moult waves in wings
  • Western gull chick about 3 weeks old flapping its developing wings
  • Male [[long-tailed paradise whydah]] (''Vidua paradisaea'') showing modified rectrices
  • Male [[mallard]] (''Anas platyrhynchos'') landing, showing outspread [[alulae]] on the leading edge of the wing
  • [[Red kite]] (''Milvus milvus'') in flight, showing remiges and rectrices
  • Measuring primary lengths, one of the steps in determining a bird's wing formula

barbule         
  • ''[[Archaeopteryx lithographica]]'' (Berlin specimen)
  • A feather with no pigment
  • Rictal bristles of a [[white-cheeked barbet]]
  • Diagram illustrating stages of evolution
  • Female model with feathers
  • [[Pomo]] [[fully feathered basket]] curated at the Jesse Peter Multicultural Museum, Santa Rosa College
  • A contour feather from a [[Guinea fowl]]
  • Feather structure of a [[blue-and-yellow macaw]]
  • Quill, calamus}}
  • Imperial Regalia]]. Detail from a painting by [[Pedro Américo]]
  • Feather tracts or pterylae and their naming
  • Colors resulting from different feather pigments<br />'''Left:''' [[turacin]] (red) and [[turacoverdin]] (green, with some structural blue [[iridescence]] at lower end) on the wing of ''[[Tauraco bannermani]]''<br />'''Right:''' [[carotenoid]]s (red) and [[melanin]]s (dark) on belly/wings of ''[[Ramphocelus bresilius]]''
BODY-COVERING STRUCTURE OF SOME DINOSAURS INCLUDING BIRDS
Feathers; Feather (bird anatomy); Dyck texture; Barbule; Barb (feather); Pterylae; Feather tract; Filoplume; Barbicel; Pterylosis; Pterylography; Feathery; Evolution of the feather; Plumology; Evolutionary origin of feathers; Bird feather; 🪶
['b?:bju:l]
¦ noun a minute filament projecting from the barb of a feather.
Origin
C19: from L. barbula, dimin. of barba 'beard'.
feather         
  • ''[[Archaeopteryx lithographica]]'' (Berlin specimen)
  • A feather with no pigment
  • Rictal bristles of a [[white-cheeked barbet]]
  • Diagram illustrating stages of evolution
  • Female model with feathers
  • [[Pomo]] [[fully feathered basket]] curated at the Jesse Peter Multicultural Museum, Santa Rosa College
  • A contour feather from a [[Guinea fowl]]
  • Feather structure of a [[blue-and-yellow macaw]]
  • Quill, calamus}}
  • Imperial Regalia]]. Detail from a painting by [[Pedro Américo]]
  • Feather tracts or pterylae and their naming
  • Colors resulting from different feather pigments<br />'''Left:''' [[turacin]] (red) and [[turacoverdin]] (green, with some structural blue [[iridescence]] at lower end) on the wing of ''[[Tauraco bannermani]]''<br />'''Right:''' [[carotenoid]]s (red) and [[melanin]]s (dark) on belly/wings of ''[[Ramphocelus bresilius]]''
BODY-COVERING STRUCTURE OF SOME DINOSAURS INCLUDING BIRDS
Feathers; Feather (bird anatomy); Dyck texture; Barbule; Barb (feather); Pterylae; Feather tract; Filoplume; Barbicel; Pterylosis; Pterylography; Feathery; Evolution of the feather; Plumology; Evolutionary origin of feathers; Bird feather; 🪶
¦ noun
1. any of the flat appendages growing from a bird's skin, consisting of a partly hollow horny shaft fringed with vanes of barbs.
2. (feathers) a fringe of long hair on the legs of a dog, horse, or other animal.
¦ verb
1. rotate the blades of (a propeller) about their own axes in such a way as to lessen the air or water resistance.
Rowing turn (an oar) so that it passes through the air edgeways.
2. [as adjective feathered] covered or decorated with feathers.
3. float or move like a feather.
Phrases
a feather in one's cap an achievement to be proud of.
feather one's (own) nest make money selfishly or opportunistically.
Derivatives
featheriness noun
featherless adjective
feathery adjective
Origin
OE fether, of Gmc origin.
Feathery         
  • ''[[Archaeopteryx lithographica]]'' (Berlin specimen)
  • A feather with no pigment
  • Rictal bristles of a [[white-cheeked barbet]]
  • Diagram illustrating stages of evolution
  • Female model with feathers
  • [[Pomo]] [[fully feathered basket]] curated at the Jesse Peter Multicultural Museum, Santa Rosa College
  • A contour feather from a [[Guinea fowl]]
  • Feather structure of a [[blue-and-yellow macaw]]
  • Quill, calamus}}
  • Imperial Regalia]]. Detail from a painting by [[Pedro Américo]]
  • Feather tracts or pterylae and their naming
  • Colors resulting from different feather pigments<br />'''Left:''' [[turacin]] (red) and [[turacoverdin]] (green, with some structural blue [[iridescence]] at lower end) on the wing of ''[[Tauraco bannermani]]''<br />'''Right:''' [[carotenoid]]s (red) and [[melanin]]s (dark) on belly/wings of ''[[Ramphocelus bresilius]]''
BODY-COVERING STRUCTURE OF SOME DINOSAURS INCLUDING BIRDS
Feathers; Feather (bird anatomy); Dyck texture; Barbule; Barb (feather); Pterylae; Feather tract; Filoplume; Barbicel; Pterylosis; Pterylography; Feathery; Evolution of the feather; Plumology; Evolutionary origin of feathers; Bird feather; 🪶
·adj Pertaining to, or resembling, feathers; covered with, or as with, feathers; as, feathery spray or snow.

Wikipédia

Flight feather

Flight feathers (Pennae volatus) are the long, stiff, asymmetrically shaped, but symmetrically paired pennaceous feathers on the wings or tail of a bird; those on the wings are called remiges (), singular remex (), while those on the tail are called rectrices (), singular rectrix (). The primary function of the flight feathers is to aid in the generation of both thrust and lift, thereby enabling flight. The flight feathers of some birds perform additional functions, generally associated with territorial displays, courtship rituals or feeding methods. In some species, these feathers have developed into long showy plumes used in visual courtship displays, while in others they create a sound during display flights. Tiny serrations on the leading edge of their remiges help owls to fly silently (and therefore hunt more successfully), while the extra-stiff rectrices of woodpeckers help them to brace against tree trunks as they hammer on them. Even flightless birds still retain flight feathers, though sometimes in radically modified forms.

The remiges are divided into primary and secondary feathers based on their position along the wing. There are typically 11 primaries attached to the manus (six attached to the metacarpus and five to the phalanges), but the outermost primary, called the remicle, is often rudimentary or absent; certain birds, notably the flamingos, grebes, and storks, have seven primaries attached to the metacarpus and 12 in all. Secondary feathers are attached to the ulna. The fifth secondary remex (numbered inwards from the carpal joint) was formerly thought to be absent in some species, but the modern view of this diastataxy is that there is a gap between the fourth and fifth secondaries. Tertiary feathers growing upon the adjoining portion of the brachium are not considered true remiges.

The moult of their flight feathers can cause serious problems for birds, as it can impair their ability to fly. Different species have evolved different strategies for coping with this, ranging from dropping all their flight feathers at once (and thus becoming flightless for some relatively short period of time) to extending the moult over a period of several years.