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Birds are bipedal, warm-blooded, egg-laying vertebrates with about 10,000 living species. The fossil record indicates birds evolved from theropod dinosaurs 200 to 150 million years ago, and the earliest known bird is the late Jurassic Archaeopteryx. There is significant evidence that birds evolved from theropod dinosaurs; as more non-avian theropods that are closely related to birds are discovered, the formerly clear distinction between non-birds and birds becomes blurred. A genetically consistent evolutionary tree would classify birds as reptiles, though some scientists would elevate birds, turtles and crocodilians to their own class, on an equal footing with reptiles.

Globally, 1,217 species of birds, or about 12 percent of the total of 9,956 described bird species, were deemed endangered or vulnerable to extinction by IUCN's 2007 Red List. In the United States, about 74 of 847 bird species are at risk, about nine percent of the total.

Ashy storm-petrel
Bald eagle
Cactus ferruginous pygmy owl
California condor
California spotted owl
Coastal California gnatcatcher
Desert nesting bald eagle
Inyo California towhee
Kittlitz's murrelet
Mexican spotted owl
Mono Basin area greater sage grouse
Northern goshawk
Okinawa woodpecker
Penguins
Piping plover
Queen Charlotte goshawk
Southwestern willow flycatcher
Spectacled eider
Steller's eider
Tricolored blackbird
Western burrowing owl
Western snowy plover
Yellow-billed cuckoo
Yellow-billed loon

Photo by Scott Frier, USFWS