Nice response Stoney- I was really just being sarcastic, but you put out some good, valid information. I probably should have refrained from my smart-axx post.
My toss in on the birds was really just to get people to scratch their heads and think "Hmm, birds have no torque, and no vertical stabilizer, so...) Kind of along the lines of Monty Python's "Search for the Holy Grail's" section on witch identification based on the idea that witches burn, as does wood, and wood floats, as do ducks, so if the gal weighs the same amount as a duck she must therefore be a witch (and of course she does, so she must be a witch...)
I have an inordinate interest and knowledge of birds (I'm a falconer) and am daily in awe of what birds can do in the air. It's one thing to see one fly by, totally another to see them in active pursuit. Maybe someday we'll be able to get our aircraft to do 10% of what they can do. I doubt we'll see it though, at least as far as maneuverability goes. You can add shifting of CG, and leading edge slats to your list too, before moving on to what they can do with their tails :^) I fly R/C, and have been on a quest to build a soaring model of a red-tailed hawk or golden eagle, but haven't been able to figure a way to do that without cheating and adding a vertical stabilizer. The closest I've come is to use drag from wing mounted control surfaces to cause yaw, but I'm not very happy with those results. I get much better flight control with a vertical stab, but of course my models are much closer to conventional aircraft than to birds, so that should be expected.
MtnMan