Dictionary Definition
brooding adj : persistently or morbidly
thoughtful [syn: broody,
contemplative,
meditative, musing, pensive, pondering, reflective, ruminative]
Noun
1 sitting on eggs so as to hatch them by the
warmth of the body [syn: incubation]
2 persistent morbid meditation on a problem [syn:
pensiveness]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -uːdɪŋ
Verb
brooding- present participle of brood
Extensive Definition
The word incubate in the context of birds refers to the development of
the chick (embryo) within
the egg and the
constant temperature required for its development over a specific
period. In most species, body heat from
the brooding parent provides the constant temperature, though
several groups, notably the Megapodes, instead
use geothermal heat or the heat generated from rotting vegetable
material, effectively creating a giant compost heap. The Namaqua
Sandgrouse of the deserts of southern Africa, needing to
keep its eggs cool during the heat of the day, stands over them
drooping its wings to shade them. The humidity is also critical,
and if the air is too dry the egg will lose too much water to the
atmosphere, which can make it difficult or impossible for hatching.
An egg will normally become lighter and the air space within the
egg will normally become larger as incubation precedes owing to
evaporation from the egg.
In the species that incubate, the work is divided
differently between the sexes. Possibly the most common pattern is
that the female does all the incubation, as in the Coscoroba
Swan and the Indian
Robin, or most of it, as is typical of falcons. In some species, such as
the Whooping
Crane, the male and the female take turns incubating the egg.
In others, such as the cassowaries, only
the male incubates. The male Mountain
Plover incubates the female's first clutch, but if she lays a
second, she incubates it herself. In Hoatzins, some
birds (mostly males) help their parents incubate later
broods.
Incubation times range from 11 days (some small
passerines and the
Black-billed
and Yellow-billed
Cuckoos) to 85 days (the Wandering
Albatross and the Brown Kiwi).
In these latter, the incubation is interrupted; the longest
uninterrupted period is 64 to 67 days in the Emperor
Penguin.http://www.birding.com/BirdRecords1.htm
It can be an energetically demanding process, with adult
albatrosses losing as much as 83 g of body weight a day.
Some species begin incubation with the first egg,
causing the young to hatch at different times; others begin after
laying the second egg, so that the third chick will be smaller and
more vulnerable to food shortages. Some start to incubate after the
last egg of the clutch, causing the young to hatch
simultaneously.
Derived meanings
Climate-controlled incubators are utilized in industrial agricultural settings and in neonatal care, especially of human infants. The life expectancy for premature infants has increased dramatically thanks to incubation.References
- Christopher Perrins (editor), Firefly Encyclopedia of Birds, ISBN 1-55297-777-3
brooding in Spanish: Incubación
brooding in French: Incubation (oiseau)
brooding in Hebrew: דגירה
brooding in Russian: Инкубатор
brooding in Swedish: Häckning#Ruvning
brooding in Turkish: Kuluçka