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The Design of a Method to Analyze the Beaks of Darwin's Finches

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2015-06-26

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Strong, Elizabeth F. 2015. The Design of a Method to Analyze the Beaks of Darwin's Finches. Bachelor's thesis, Harvard College.

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Abstract

Variation in beak shape among Darwin’s finches has long intrigued scientists[19][5][16]. An adage in biology is “form follows function,” or in this context, the shape of the bird beak is the result of the food available to the bird. To what extent is this true? Recently, scientists from Princeton observed rapid natural selection events that caused significant changes to the beak shapes of Darwin’s finches in response to weather events that first limited food resources to large, hard seeds and then later to small, soft seeds[18]. How much of this change in beak shape is due to the mechanical properties of the available seeds? This thesis looks to develop an understanding of how beak shape alone affects the ability of a bird to crush seeds. This thesis uses an engineering analysis tool called finite element analysis (FEA) to explore these questions. This thesis provides evidence that supports the statement that “form follows function” by demonstrating that the mechanical performance of the beak is a function that depends strongly on shape. This thesis concludes that it may be possible to create models representative of the entire set of possible bird beak shapes beginning with just several experimentally verified models, and that creating and testing these models this would be a viable and efficient way to study the theoretical functional optima of beaks for crushing seeds.

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Engineering, Mechanical

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