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  2. Wing clipping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wing_clipping

    A wing-clipped Meyer's parrot perching on a drawer handle. While clipping is endorsed by some avian veterinarians, others oppose it. [7]By restricting flight, wing clipping may help prevent indoor birds from risking injury from ceiling fans or flying into large windows, but no evidence shows that clipped birds are safer than full-winged ones, only that clipped birds are subject to different ...

  3. Insect wing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insect_wing

    Insect wing. Insect wings are adult outgrowths of the insect exoskeleton that enable insects to fly. They are found on the second and third thoracic segments (the mesothorax and metathorax), and the two pairs are often referred to as the forewings and hindwings, respectively, though a few insects lack hindwings, even rudiments.

  4. Pinioning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinioning

    Pinioning is the act of surgically removing one pinion joint, the joint of a bird 's wing farthest from the body, to prevent flight. Pinioning is often done to waterfowl and poultry. It is not typically done to companion bird species such as parrots. This practice is unnecessary and restricted in many countries.

  5. Bat wing development - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bat_wing_development

    Bat wings are modified tetrapod forelimbs. Because bats are mammals, the skeletal structures in their wings are morphologically homologous to the skeletal components found in other tetrapod forelimbs. Through adaptive evolution these structures in bats have undergone many morphological changes, such as webbed digits, elongation of the forelimb ...

  6. Cricket (insect) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cricket_(insect)

    Gryllus firmus exhibits wing polymorphism; some individuals have fully functional, long hind wings and others have short wings and cannot fly. The short-winged females have smaller flight muscles, greater ovarian development, and produce more eggs, so the polymorphism adapts the cricket for either dispersal or reproduction.

  7. Flight feather - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flight_feather

    Red kite (Milvus milvus) in flight, showing remiges and rectrices. Flight feathers (Pennae volatus) [1] 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 (/ ˈ r ɛ m ɪ dʒ iː z /), singular remex (/ ˈ r iː m ɛ k s /), while those on the tail are called rectrices (/ ˈ r ɛ k t r ...

  8. Earwig - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earwig

    Forficulida. Earwigs make up the insect order Dermaptera. With about 2,000 species [1] in 12 families, they are one of the smaller insect orders. Earwigs have characteristic cerci, a pair of forceps -like pincers on their abdomen, and membranous wings folded underneath short, rarely used forewings, hence the scientific order name, "skin wings".

  9. Brachyptery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brachyptery

    Brachyptery. Aposematic display of flightless stick insect with brachypterous wings. Brachyptery is an anatomical condition in which an animal has very reduced wings. Such animals or their wings may be described as "brachypterous". Another descriptor for very small wings is microptery.