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Study finds city life is tough on young birds
by Amy Wallace
Washington (UPI) Sep 8, 2017


Australian magpie is a dunker, dips food in water before eating
Washington (UPI) Sep 7, 2017 - If you give an Australian magpie a donut and a cup of coffee, he or she will be likely to dunk it. The magpie is a dunker.

New researchers suggest magpie offspring learn to dunk their food in water before eating by copying their parents.

Food-dunking isn't unusual. The behavior has been observed in 25 bird species -- the Australian magpie is only the latest to be seen dunking before eating.

Researchers haven't been able to figure out exactly why some species deploy the technique and others don't. Some have suggested birds dunk toxic insects in water to minimize their bitter taste.

Biologists from the University of York tested their hypothesis in the wild.

"We presented the wild magpie with a local insect called mountain katydid, which is thought to be distasteful due to the toxins it emits," doctoral student Eleanor Drinkwater said in a news release. "The adult magpie first dragged and beat the insect on the ground before carrying it to a nearby puddle, dunking it and thrashing under water."

After eating the insect, the adult returned to the puddle for a second insect. After dunking, the magpie left the dunked katydid behind. A juvenile retrieved the insect and mimicked the dunking action.

"Although more research is needed to understand why the bird dunks its food before eating, our initial assumptions are that it responds to the 'nasty tasting' chemical defenses of the insect, by dunking it in water and making it more palatable," Drinkwater said.

The findings -- detailed this week in the journal Australian Field Ornithology -- also suggest birds learn dunking by mimicry.

"It was exciting to see that this process was copied by the juvenile bird, suggesting that this behavior could be socially learnt," Drinkwater said. "More research can now be done to determine how common this behaviour is from adult birds through to its offspring."

Scientists from Lund University found in a recent study that city life can be difficult for young birds, but if they survive their first year, they are less susceptible to stress.

"It seems that the various stress factors in the city do not affect the survival of adult individuals in the same way as they affect that of young birds," Pablo Salmón, a research student in biology at Lund University, said in a press release.

The study, published Wednesday in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B, examined the young and adult great tits in Malmo, Sweden, and compared their survival rates with the same species in rural areas.

Scientists found that great tits in city environments have a harder time reaching maturity, but if the birds do survive their first year the negative effects decrease.

The study identified telomeres, the extremity of the chromosome, as the mechanism that predicts the difference in birds' survival between rural and urban environments.

Telomeres are found in humans as well as other animals and work to protect the chromosomes and the genome. The longer the telomeres, the better the chance for a longer survival of a species.

"Our study is the first to show the connection between telomere length and the survival of individuals in the urban environment," Salmón said.

Scientists found that only young birds with long telomeres survived their first year in a city environment. The correlation between telomere length and survival was found in birds in rural environments, however, the effect was significantly stronger in urban birds.

The study was not able to determine exactly what in the urban setting made birds with shorter telomeres die sooner.

FLORA AND FAUNA
Corruption fuelling ivory trade in central Africa: study
Yaounde (AFP) Sept 7, 2017
Sophisticated international trafficking of ivory in central Africa is being fuelled by high levels of corruption, according to a report published Thursday. The study by wildlife trade monitoring network Traffic said weak governance, corruption and shifting trade dynamics are seriously undermining efforts to control ivory trafficking throughout Cameroon, the Central African Republic, Congo-Br ... read more

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