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are birds reptiles

Yes and no: in modern evolutionary biology, birds are technically reptiles (more precisely, avian dinosaurs), but in everyday language people usually treat “birds” and “reptiles” as separate groups.

Quick Scoop

  • In phylogenetic (evolution-based) classification, a reptile is “any descendant of the original reptile group,” which includes dinosaurs and therefore birds.
  • In the older Linnaean system and in casual speech, reptiles are “scaly, cold‑blooded animals like lizards, snakes, turtles, crocodiles,” so birds are placed in their own class Aves, not called reptiles.
  • So the answer to “are birds reptiles?” depends on what you mean by “reptile”:
    • Evolution sense → yes, birds are reptiles (avian dinosaurs).
    • Everyday sense → no, birds are their own thing.

Why Scientists Say “Yes”

  • Birds evolved from small, feathered theropod dinosaurs within the archosaur group, which also includes crocodiles, inside the broader reptile lineage.
  • In this evolutionary framework, you cannot “evolve out” of your ancestral group: if dinosaurs are reptiles and birds are dinosaurs, then birds are reptiles.

Why Most People Say “No”

  • The classic schoolbook definition of reptiles focuses on traits like dry scales and being ectothermic (cold‑blooded), which birds lack, so they were long kept in a separate class.
  • Because of this older system and everyday experience, people feel an intuitive divide between “bird” (feathers, flight, warm‑blooded) and “reptile” (scales, no feathers, mostly cold‑blooded).

Two Ways To Phrase It

  • Careful scientific phrasing: “Birds are living dinosaurs within the reptile lineage.”
  • Everyday-friendly phrasing: “Birds are not reptiles in the usual sense, but they evolved from reptilian dinosaurs and sit inside the reptile branch of the family tree.”

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.