网站地图 RSS订阅
高级搜索 收藏本站
 首页 | 新闻 | 小说 | 笑话 | 试题 | 散文 | 诗歌 | 演讲 | 娱乐 | 故事 | 科普 | 行业 | 技巧 | 英语论坛 | 英语书店
 
 当前位置:首页>科普> Thieves of a Feather  
Thieves of a Feather
文章来源: 文章作者: 发布时间:2008-01-23   字体: [ ]  进入论坛  
  划词......
 

Dec. 19, 2007

Some birds are masters of crime. These sneaky species steal food from other birds—and get away with it.

A diverse collection of birds is guilty of such thievery, and scientists have long wondered what these families of birds have in common. A new study suggests that big body size does not predict bullying behavior. Instead, among other traits, it is the size of the birds' brains that matters most.

 

 

Golden eagles often steal food from other birds. Like other feathered thieves, these birds have big brains in relation to their overall size.

Golden eagles often steal food from other birds. Like other feathered thieves, these birds have big brains in relation to their overall size.

iStockphoto

 

Food theft is also called kleptoparasitism, and about 2 percent of the world's birds do it. That's 197 out of 9,672 known bird species that have been seen swiping food from other bird species.

Certain families of birds, including falcons, eagles, and pelicans, are especially prone to stealing. Some songbirds, on the other hand, are less likely to steal.

To learn more about what makes some birds tend toward a life of crime, scientists from the University of Québec at Montréal analyzed 856 published reports of theft by one bird from another.

Researcher Julie Morand-Ferron, a member of the study team, says she started the project after watching birds in Barbados sneak dry dog food out of unattended bowls. The birds, called Carib grackles, then snatched pellets from each other.

For her study, Morand-Ferron considered only birds that steal from other species of birds (rather than from dogs, people, or the thief's own species). She read about some dramatic examples of thievery, including birds that grabbed food from others in midair and high-speed chases during which birds zigged and zagged through the sky. She learned that members of some species harass other birds until they spit up food that they'd swallowed.

The team found some patterns among the behaviors of the birds they studied. For one thing, bird families that often steal tend to live in open environments such as ocean shores. There, they can easily see the targets of their attacks.

Kleptoparasitic families also tend to eat fish, mice, and other vertebrates instead of just insects. These meatier meals are hard to catch, and they deliver lots of valuable calories, so they are tempting to steal.

Finally, kleptoparasitic birds tend to have big brains in relation to their bodies. That may seem surprising, since human bullies are often thought to be stronger in size than in smarts.

But for birds, stealing isn't about brute strength. It takes a clever bird to get food out of another hungry bird's claws, especially if that bird is bigger than you are. In other words, birds that steal might deserve some respect.

"There's this stigma attached to individuals who steal things to make a living: that they can't catch fish or forage on their own," says David Shealer of Loras College in Dubuque, Iowa.

But Shealer has studied birds called roseate terns. And the terns that steal, he says, are "far and away the best parents."

But don't take this as advice to start swiping cookies from your classmates' lunches. These are birds we're talking about!—Emily Sohn


 

↑返回顶部   打印本页   关闭窗口↓  
相关文章
·Heavy Sleep
·Babies Prove Sound Learners
·Chew for Health
·Sweeeet! The Skinny on Sugar
·Play for Science
·Seen on the Science Fair Sce
·Where Have All the Bees Gone
·Millennium Seed Bank Project
·Monkey Math
·Catfish(鲶鱼)
·Rhea(美洲鸵)
·Cockroach(蟑螂)
·Sea horse(海马)
·Darwin frog(达尔文蛙)
·Namaqua sandgrouse(纳马夸沙
·Marmoset(绒猴)
·Emperor penguin(皇企鹅)
·人类的寿命极限在逐渐延长
·替代治疗在美国变得越来越流行
·亚洲女性自杀率高
·奥戴丽.赫本的美颜秘诀
·HOW DO ANIMALS SPEND THE WIN
·“可穿着电脑”将逐渐走进我们
·指纹探测新技术问世
·世界上第一只克隆狗在韩国亮相
  关键字:
  范  围:
 
 
热 点 频 道