Why are some eggs round and others pointy? It may have to do with how well a bird flies – Los Angeles Times

It’s a mystery that goes back to the days of Aristotle, flummoxing biologists and mathematicians for centuries: Why do bird’s eggs come in so many different shapes and sizes?

Why are owl eggs almost perfectly round, while hummingbird eggs look like teeny tiny watermelons? And why are still other eggs pointy, but only on one end?

Now researchers have made a serious attempt to answer this deceptively simple question. Their conclusion: Egg shape is related to how much time a bird spends in flight, according to a report in Friday’s edition of the journal Science.

Scientists have long hypothesized about the reasons for eggs to have the shapes they do. Even Aristotle had a theory: “Long and pointed eggs are female; those that are round, or more rounded at the narrow end, are male,” the Greek philosopher wrote in “The History of Animals” in the fourth century B.C.

Why are some eggs round and others pointy? It may have to do with how well a bird flies – Los Angeles Times