Parental care: the key to understanding endothermy and other convergent features in birds and mammals

Update Item Information
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 (c) 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
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