Bird measurement

Most measurement requires the use of calipers. Here, the measurement of length, wing, tail, tarsus, and two forms of culmen measurement are shown.

Bird measurement or bird biometrics are approaches to quantify the size of birds in scientific studies. The variation in dimensions and weights across birds is one of the fundamental sources of diversity among birds, and even Within species, dimensions may vary across populations within species, between the sexes and depending on age and condition. For measurements to be useful, they must be well-defined to be consistent and comparable with those taken by others or at other points in time. Measurements can be useful to identify species, quantify functional and ecomorphological differences, study growth, variation between geographically separated forms, identify differences between the sexes, age or otherwise characterize individual birds. While certain measurements are regularly taken to study living birds, others apply only to specimens in bird collections or are measurable only in the laboratory. The conventions used for measurement can vary between authors and works, making comparisons of sizes a matter that needs considerable care.[1]

  1. ^ Baldwin, S. Prentiss; Oberholser, Harry C.; Worley, Leonard G. (1931). "Measurements of birds". Scientific Publications of the Cleveland Museum of Natural History. 2: 1–165.