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Bird Hobbies #2 - News & personal stories

#1
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Amazon’s white bellbirds set new record for loudest bird call

VIDEO: https://players.brightcove.net/105088803...5995727001

https://www.umass.edu/newsoffice/article...new-record

RELEASE: Biologist Jeff Podos at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, with Mario Cohn-Haft at the Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia, Brazil, report that they have recorded the loudest bird calls ever documented, made by dove-sized male white bellbirds as part of their mating rituals in the mountains of the northern Amazon. Details are in the latest Current Biology.

The researchers note that it’s actually hard to describe how loud the bellbird’s call is, because it’s difficult to compare sounds from different distances. But the calls are so loud, they wonder how white bellbird females listen at close range without damaging their hearing. Calls of howler monkeys and bison are well studied and quite loud, Podos, an expert in bioacoustics, points out, but not nearly as loud as the impressive bellbirds, who weigh about half a pound (1/4 kg) compared to the larger mammals.

Podos says, “We were lucky enough to see females join males on their display perches. In these cases, we saw that the males sing only their loudest songs. Not only that, they swivel dramatically during these songs, so as to blast the song’s final note directly at the females. We would love to know why females willingly stay so close to males as they sing so loudly,” he says. “Maybe they are trying to assess males up close, though at the risk of some damage to their hearing systems.”

For this work supported by a Fulbright scholarship to Podos, he and Cohn-Haft used high-quality sound recorders plus special sound-level meters and high-speed video to slow the action enough for study. Among other goals, they tried to identify adaptations such as breathing musculature, head and beak size, the shape of the throat and how these may influence the unusual aptitude the birds have for long-distance song transmission, a topic that has been very poorly studied, Podos says. “We don’t know how small animals manage to get so loud. We are truly at the early stages of understanding this biodiversity.”

One of the new things the researchers learned is that there seems to be a trade-off at work for this behavior – as bellbird and piha songs get louder, they get shorter, they report. This may be because the birds’ respiratory systems have a finite ability to control airflow and generate sound.

Podos says the national institute, in the Amazon’s largest city Manaus, is a global hub for studying biodiversity. His co-author, Cohn-Haft, who grew up in Williamsburg, Mass., not far from the UMass Amherst campus, is curator of birds at the national institute and a world expert on Amazonian birds and their identification. Cohn-Haft has been leading expeditions for years into remote Amazon areas to find and characterize bird species, habitats, behavior and vocalizations, which still are little known.

In these earlier expeditions, Cohn-Haft noticed that the bellbirds had some interesting anatomical features, including unusually thick, well-developed abdominal muscles and ribs, but science knew almost nothing about this, which led to the expedition. Podos says their recent discoveries in bellbirds in this rarely studied area of body structures shaped by natural selection provides new information, and an example of the consequences of sexual selection, which drives the evolution of exaggerated traits such as loud singing.

Podos says their studies also contribute important new findings about bird communication and song, “the glue that holds bird societies together,” and how they diverged morphologically by natural selection that changes the kind of songs they can sing and their social interactions. In future studies, Cohn-Haft says, he wants to further explore “the physical and anatomical structures and behaviors that allow bellbirds to produce such loud sounds and to endure them without hearing damage.”
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#2
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Puffins have learned to use tools
https://www.salon.com/2020/01/06/puffins...overlords/

INTRO: Crows are intimidating birds — not merely for their menacing stare, but because they are famously intelligent. Specifically, crows are able to use human tools to accomplish tasks. It was thought that crows were unique among birds in this regard; yet a new study suggests they are not alone among super-intelligent avians.

According to a recent study published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Scientists of the United States of America, seabirds, specifically puffins, are tool-wielders too. In 2014, researchers from the University of Oxford and the South Iceland Nature Resource Centre studied puffins on Skomer Island off the coast of West Wales, and on Grimsey Island 25 miles off the north coast of the main island of Iceland.

During their observations, researchers found puffins were using sticks to scratch themselves. As noted in the study, puffins often have to suffer parasites like ticks on their bodies. Some of the observed birds appeared to have figured out that a stick could scratch hard-to-reach parts of their bodies. Any human that has ever used a back-itching scratcher can probably relate. “More broadly, our findings provide evidence of true tool use in a seabird,” the study states. “This suggests tool use is rare in this group, but can no longer be considered absent.”

The evidence was recorded with a camera, the video from which can be viewed within the published study... (MORE)
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