| Publication Type | journal article |
| School or College | College of Science |
| Department | Biology |
| Creator | Farmer, Colleen G. |
| Title | Parental care: the key to understanding endothermy and other convergent features in birds and mammals |
| Date | 2000 |
| Description | Birds and mammals share a number of features that are remarkably similar but that have evolved independently. One of these characters, endothermy, has been suggested to have played a cardinal role in avian and mammalian evolution. I hypothesize that it is parental care, rather than endothermy, that is the key to understanding the amazing convergence between mammals and birds. Endothermy may have arisen as a consequence of selection for parental care because endothermy enables a parent to control incubation temperature. The remarkable ability of many birds and mammals to sustain vigorous exercise may also have arisen as a consequence of selection for parental care because provisioning of offspring often requires sustained vigorous exercise. Because extensive parental care encompasses a wide range of behaviors, morphology, and physiology, it may be a key innovation that accounts for the majority of convergent avian and mammalian characters. |
| Type | Text |
| Publisher | University of Chicago Press |
| Volume | 155 |
| Issue | 3 |
| First Page | 326 |
| Last Page | 334 |
| Subject | Evolution; Metabolism; Convergence |
| Language | eng |
| Bibliographic Citation | Farmer, C. G. (2000). Parental care: the key to understanding endothermy and other convergent features in birds and mammals. American Naturalist, 155(3), 326-34. |
| Rights Management | © University of Chicago Press http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/ |
| Format Medium | application/pdf |
| Format Extent | 1,703,276 bytes |
| Identifier | ir-main,6043 |
| ARK | ark:/87278/s6w38dvt |
| Setname | ir_uspace |
| ID | 706306 |
| Reference URL | https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6w38dvt |