Like, I’m aware of there being exceptions like Penguins, Ostriches, and Bats. But in general, why is there such a distinct land/air split between mammals and birds? Why don’t mammals share the ground with ecosystems of plant- and meat-eating walking birds? Why didn’t we get birds that evolved to slither like snakes, or tunnel like rodents? Why isn’t it (land+sky) all just mammals, where we’d have parrot- and vulture-like bats that don’t lay eggs? If we started the simulation again, might things like this evolve?

  • CmdrShepard49@sh.itjust.works
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    27 days ago

    Most birds can fly because they are an offshoot of one group of dinosaurs (avian dinosaurs) that survived the last great extinction when their non-flying non-avian dinosaur relatives did not.

    Is this accurate? I was always under the impression that birds evolved from “land dinosaurs”.

    • Makhno@lemmy.world
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      27 days ago

      Is this accurate? I was always under the impression that birds evolved from “land dinosaurs”.

      Well, yes, where else would the flying dinosaurs come from?

      • CmdrShepard49@sh.itjust.works
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        27 days ago

        That it was more of a direct path from say raptors to chickens, but I mentioned in another reply that I had forgotten about all the different dinosaur eras and the hundreds of millions of years between them all.

    • phantomwise@lemmy.ml
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      27 days ago

      I guess that depends on your definition of what a bird is and on where you place the transition between bird-like dinosaurs and birds. Like Archaeopteryx is one of the species in that weird kinda dinosaur kinda bird phase.

      Edit: Genus not species, sorry. I hate taxonomy so much…