{"id":68989,"date":"2021-03-23T02:30:00","date_gmt":"2021-03-23T10:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/on-the-trails-greenery-in-avian-nests\/"},"modified":"2021-03-24T12:18:16","modified_gmt":"2021-03-24T20:18:16","slug":"on-the-trails-greenery-in-avian-nests","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/on-the-trails-greenery-in-avian-nests\/","title":{"rendered":"On The Trails: Greenery in avian nests"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/em><\/ins><\/p>\n <\/em><\/ins><\/p>\n This article has been updated to feature a new photo and caption. A previous version, due to editor’s error, attributed the nesting behavior of a European starling to a European swallow.<\/p>\n <\/em><\/ins><\/p>\n By Mary F. Willson <\/strong><\/ins><\/p>\n For the Juneau Empire <\/em><\/ins><\/p>\n Most birds build nests chiefly of plant parts — branches, twigs, grass blades, mosses; in some cases, mud is a major component. Feathers, lichen, spider webs, plant down, hair and other materials may be included by various species.<\/p>\n Less well-known (to non-ornithologists) is that many birds, from songbirds to raptors and herons, also add fresh, green-leafy, nonstructural material to the nest. In general, the added greenery is from species that have aromatic leaves, rich in volatile compounds; these plants are a highly non-random, carefully selected portion of the plants available in the nesting habitat. The persistence of such a habit in so many species suggests that the use of greenery contributes in some way to reproductive success and reproductive fitness. The search for fitness consequences has led to numerous studies, but many questions still remain tantalizingly unanswered.<\/p>\n But before we go into all that, let’s first establish that — contrary to much conventional ‘wisdom’ — birds have a decent-to-excellent sense of smell. Depending on the species, they use it to locate insects in leaf litter or krill in the sea or carrion, to identify individuals, to locate a nest burrow when returning to it at night, and I bet that’s how they found my peanut-butter feeders when I first hung them up.<\/p>\n Although many ideas about the function of nest greenery have been suggested, three ideas have been examined most extensively.<\/p>\n Two species of starling express their interest in nest greenery entirely during the time of courtship and pair formation. Males then carry green material into the nest cavity in the presence of a female before egg-laying; that activity is correlated with testosterone levels. Some studies have shown that an increase of greenery led to larger clutches and more male chicks but experimental removal of greenery reduced the likelihood that a female laid eggs in that nest. Perhaps females use the presentation of greenery to judge the quality of the males?? But more testosterone in the males was associated with less paternal care of chicks and more greenery also led to more aggression among females. So the results of the several studies indicate some positive and some negative effects. In addition, other experiments found that nesting (already paired) females with nests decorated by their mates often left the greenery in place during incubation (although they commonly removed greenery added by an experimenter), and one recent study showed that the presence of greenery somehow induced more steady incubation behavior of the female, a shorter incubation period, and bigger chicks.<\/p>\n