Switch to diester preen waxes may reduce avian nest predation by mammalian predators using olfactory cues
Open Access
- 15 November 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by The Company of Biologists in Journal of Experimental Biology
- Vol. 208 (22) , 4199-4202
- https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.01872
Abstract
SUMMARY It has long been recognised that nest depredation by olfactory-searching mammals greatly influences the reproductive success of ground-nesting birds. Yet adaptations of birds to diminish smell during nesting have rarely been investigated. Recently, a remarkable shift in the composition of uropygial gland secretions (preen waxes) was discovered in many ground-nesting shorebirds and ducks that begin incubation, during which the usual mixtures of monoester preen waxes are replaced by mixtures of less volatile diester waxes. In this study we show experimentally that an olfactory-searching dog had greater difficulty detecting mixtures of the less volatile diesters than mixtures of monoesters. This is consistent with the hypothesis that diester preen waxes reduce birds' smell and thereby reduce predation risk.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Plumage reflectance is not affected by preen wax composition in red knots Calidris canutusJournal of Avian Biology, 2004
- Chemical warfare? Effects of uropygial oil on feather‐degrading bacteriaJournal of Avian Biology, 2003
- Differential moult patterns in relation to antipredator behaviour during incubation in four tundra ploversIbis, 2003
- Sandpipers (Scolopacidae) switch from monoester to diester preen waxes during courtship and incubation, but why?Proceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2002
- Indirect effects of lemming cycles on sandpiper dynamics: 50 years of counts from southern SwedenOecologia, 2002
- Molecular analysis of intact preen waxes of Calidris canutus (Aves: Scolopacidae) by gas chromatography/mass spectrometryLipids, 2000
- Structural Identification of the Diester Preen-Gland Waxes of the Red Knot (Calidris canutus)Journal of Natural Products, 2000
- Nest and Egg Crypsis in the Ground-Nesting Stone Curlew Burhinus oedicnemusJournal of Avian Biology, 1995
- THE UROPYGIAL GLANDPublished by Elsevier ,1982
- Sex differences in the chemical composition of uropygial gland waxes in domestic ducksBiochemical Systematics and Ecology, 1979