avian behavior
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Animals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 31
Author(s):  
Gisela Kaplan

This paper discusses paradoxes in our relationship to and treatment of birds in captive and conservation contexts. The paper identifies modern and new challenges that arise from declining bird numbers worldwide. Such challenges have partly changed zoos into providers of insurance populations specifically for species at risk of extinction. They have also accelerated fieldwork projects, but by using advanced technological tools and in increasing numbers, contradictorily, they may cause serious harm to the very birds studied for conservation purposes. In practice, very few avian species have any notable protection or guarantee of good treatment. The paper first deals with shortcomings of identifying problematic avian behavior in captive birds. It then brings together specific cases of field studies and captive breeding for conservation in which major welfare deficits are identified. Indeed, the paper argues that avian welfare is now an urgent task. This is not just because of declining bird numbers but because of investment in new technologies in field studies that may have introduced additional stressors and put at risk bird survival. While the paper documents a substantial number of peer-reviewed papers criticizing practices counter to modern welfare standards, they have by and large not led to changes in some practices. Some solutions are suggested that could be readily implemented and, to my knowledge, have never been considered under a welfare model before.


2021 ◽  
pp. 53-76
Author(s):  
Andrea K. Townsend ◽  
Dana M. Hawley

Parasites both affect and are affected by the behavior of birds. Moreover, specific avian behaviors can either suppress or augment parasite spread, depending on context and parasite transmission mode. The chapter focuses on major categories of behavior important for the key steps of the parasite transmission process: first, the likelihood of exposure to parasites; second, host susceptibility to infection and degree of infectiousness reached once exposed; and third, the likelihood of spreading infection to other hosts or vectors. The chapter begins by discussing behaviors that birds use to minimize exposure to parasites (e.g., preening and other ‘antiparasite’ behaviors) and the immediate effects of infection on behavior (e.g., lethargy and other ‘sickness’ behaviors). The focus then truns to foraging and movement, which are specific behaviors that both can increase exposure to parasites and are altered by infection. Finally, the chapter considers how a suite of behaviors including social interactions, individual personality, and mating behaviors can affect and are affected by parasites in ways relevant to all three steps of the parasite transmission process. Throughout, the chapter highlights and integrates areas in which recent advances have been made or for which more data are sorely needed in avian systems, emphasizing directions for future research at the intersection of avian behavior and infectious disease ecology.


2021 ◽  
Vol 118 (23) ◽  
pp. e2102588118
Author(s):  
Kasey M. Laurent ◽  
Bob Fogg ◽  
Tobias Ginsburg ◽  
Casey Halverson ◽  
Michael J. Lanzone ◽  
...  

Turbulent winds and gusts fluctuate on a wide range of timescales from milliseconds to minutes and longer, a range that overlaps the timescales of avian flight behavior, yet the importance of turbulence to avian behavior is unclear. By combining wind speed data with the measured accelerations of a golden eagle (Aquila chrysaetos) flying in the wild, we find evidence in favor of a linear relationship between the eagle’s accelerations and atmospheric turbulence for timescales between about 1/2 and 10 s. These timescales are comparable to those of typical eagle behaviors, corresponding to between about 1 and 25 wingbeats, and to those of turbulent gusts both larger than the eagle’s wingspan and smaller than large-scale atmospheric phenomena such as convection cells. The eagle’s accelerations exhibit power spectra and intermittent activity characteristic of turbulence and increase in proportion to the turbulence intensity. Intermittency results in accelerations that are occasionally several times stronger than gravity, which the eagle works against to stay aloft. These imprints of turbulence on the bird’s movements need to be further explored to understand the energetics of birds and other volant life-forms, to improve our own methods of flying through ceaselessly turbulent environments, and to engage airborne wildlife as distributed probes of the changing conditions in the atmosphere.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tayanne L. Corbani ◽  
Jessica E. Martin ◽  
Susan D. Healy

Husbandry procedures and facility settings, such as low-frequency fire alarms, can produce noises in a laboratory environment that cause stress to animals used in research. However, most of the data demonstrating harmful effects that have, consequently, led to adaptations to management, have largely come from laboratory rodents with little known of the impacts on avian behavior and physiology. Here we examined whether exposure to a routine laboratory noise, a low-frequency fire alarm test, induced behavioral changes in laboratory zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata). Twenty-four breeding pairs of zebra finches were randomly selected and exposed to the low-frequency fire alarm (sounding for 10–20 s) or no noise (control) on separate test days. All birds were filmed before and after the alarm sounded and on a control day (without the alarm). The zebra finches decreased their general activity and increased stationary and social behaviors after exposure to the alarm. Brief exposure to a low-frequency alarm disrupted the birds' behavior for at least 15 min. The induction of this behavioral stress response suggests that low-frequency sound alarms in laboratory facilities have the potential to compromise the welfare of laboratory birds.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Bradley D Scholten ◽  
Abigail R Beard ◽  
Hyeryeong Choi ◽  
Dena M Baker ◽  
Margaret E Caulfield ◽  
...  

Abstract Recent studies suggest that visual and acoustic anthropogenic disturbances can cause physiological stress in animals. Human-induced stress may be particularly problematic for birds as new technologies, such as drones, increasingly invade their low-altitude air space. Although professional and recreational drone usage is increasing rapidly, there is little information on how drones affect avian behavior and physiology. We examined the effects of drone activity on behavior and physiology in adult, box-nesting tree swallows (Tachycineta bicolor). Specifically, we monitored bird behavior during drone flights and in response to a control object and measured telomere lengths and corticosterone levels as indicators of longer-term physiological stress. We predicted that drone-exposed tree swallows would habituate behaviorally after multiple flights, but that telomeres would shorten more quickly and that baseline corticosterone levels would be altered. One significant and two strong, non-significant trends in behavioral assays indicated that adult swallows acted more aggressively towards drone presence compared to a control object, but were slower to approach the drone initially. Swallows were also more reluctant to use nest boxes during drone activity. Tree swallows habituated to drone presence as expected, although the rate of habituation often did not differ between drone-exposed and control groups. Contrary to our prediction, drone activity did not affect telomere length, corticosterone levels, body mass or fledging rates. Overall, our results indicate that a small number of short, targeted, drone flights do not impact tree swallow health or productivity differently than a non-invasive control object. Minor behavioral differences suggest that increasing the frequency of drone use could impact this species. We provide some of the first results addressing how drone activity alters behavioral, physiological and molecular responses to stress in songbirds. A better understanding of these impacts will allow ecologists to make more informed decisions on the use and regulation of new drone technologies.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffrey M. DaCosta ◽  
Matthew J. Miller ◽  
Jennifer L. Mortensen ◽  
J. Michael Reed ◽  
Robert L. Curry ◽  
...  

AbstractThe West Indian avifauna has provided fundamental insights into island biogeography, taxon cycles, and the evolution of avian behavior. Our interpretations, however, rely on robust hypotheses of evolutionary relationships and consistent conclusions about taxonomic status in groups with many endemic island populations. Here we present a phylogenetic study of the West Indian thrashers, tremblers, and allies, an assemblage of at least 5 species found on 29 islands, which is considered the archipelago’s only avian radiation. We improve on previous phylogenetic studies of this group by using double-digest restriction site-associated DNA sequencing (ddRAD-seq) to broadly sample loci scattered across the nuclear genome. A variety of analyses, based on either nucleotide variation in 2,223 loci that were recovered in all samples or on 13,282 loci that were confidently scored as present or absent in all samples, converged on a single well-supported phylogenetic hypothesis. In contrast to previous studies, we found that the resident West Indian taxa form a monophyletic group, exclusive of the Neotropical–Nearctic migratory Gray Catbird Dumetella carolinensis, which breeds in North America. Earlier studies indicated that the Gray Catbird was nested within a clade of island resident species. Instead, our findings imply a single colonization of the West Indies without the need to invoke a subsequent ‘reverse colonization’ of the mainland by West Indian taxa. Furthermore, our study is the first to sample both endemic subspecies of the endangered White-breasted Thrasher Ramphocinclus brachyurus. We find that these subspecies have a long history of evolutionary independence with no evidence of gene flow, and are as genetically divergent from each other as other genera in the group. These findings support recognition of R. brachyurus (restricted to Martinique) and the Saint Lucia Thrasher R. sanctaeluciae as two distinct, single-island endemic species, and indicate the need to re-evaluate conservation plans for these taxa. Our results demonstrate the utility of phylogenomic datasets for generating robust systematic hypotheses.


2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Diego A. Guzmán ◽  
Ana G. Flesia ◽  
Miguel A. Aon ◽  
Stefania Pellegrini ◽  
Raúl H. Marin ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 88 ◽  
pp. 112-121 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jessica K. Evans ◽  
Katherine L. Buchanan ◽  
Simon C. Griffith ◽  
Kirk C. Klasing ◽  
BriAnne Addison

2015 ◽  
Vol 171 ◽  
pp. 241-252 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eleanor Sheridan ◽  
Jacquelyn Randolet ◽  
Travis Lee DeVault ◽  
Thomas Walter Seamans ◽  
Bradley Fields Blackwell ◽  
...  

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