Feather | Flight, Structure, Function, & Facts | Britannica (original) (raw)

feather, the component structure of the outer covering and flight surfaces of all modern birds. Unique to birds, feathers apparently evolved from the scales of birds’ reptilian ancestors. The many different types of feathers are variously specialized for insulation, flight, formation of body contours, display, and sensory reception.

Unlike the hair of most mammals, feathers do not cover the entire skin surface of birds but are arranged in symmetrical tracts (pterylae) with areas of bare skin (apteria) between. The latter may contain the small soft feathers called down.

feather capeAhulii (feather cape), red iiwi (Vestiaria coccinea; Hawaiian honeycreeper) and yellow oo (Acrulocercus nobilis) feathers, from the Hawaiian Islands, late 18th–early 19th century; in the Honolulu Academy of Arts.

The typical feather consists of a central shaft (rachis), with serial paired branches (barbs) forming a flattened, usually curved surface—the vane. The barbs possess further branches —the barbules—and the barbules of adjacent barbs are attached to one another by hooks, stiffening the vane. In many birds, some or all of the feathers lack the barbules or the hooks, and the plumage has a loose, hairlike appearance.

Dromedary camels (Camelus dromedarius). Animals, mammals. Britannica Quiz Ultimate Animals Quiz

Feathers have been used for ornamentation and as regalia in many societies, both nonliterate and highly developed. Hats and other accoutrements have featured or been constructed entirely of feathers and sometimes entire wings or pairs of wings down to modern times. Numerous governments have protected colourful species of birds to prevent their extinction at the hands of feather hunters. Feathers from domestic fowl slaughtered for meat are a standard by-product of poultry farmers and are used for decoration, padding, and insulation. See also plumage.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica This article was most recently revised and updated by John P. Rafferty.