Science & Technology - Posted by Jo Kelly-Leeds on Friday, July 6, 2012 12:16 - 0 Comments
Hormones dictate when birds fly the nest

Unlike other birds, young seabirds leave their nests of their own accord when their corticosterone levels have reached a peak, rather than as a result of their parents' behavior. (Credit: Sarah D/Flickr)
U. LEEDS (UK) — Hormones, not mom and dad, decide when it’s time for baby seabirds to leave home, new research shows.
A new study— published online in Behavioral Ecology on July 5—aimed to pinpoint the main trigger which causes chicks to leave the nest and embark on an independent life, a process known as fledging.
While studying a colony of Manx Shearwaters (Puffinus puffinus), on the island of Skomer, researchers noticed that parent birdsfeed their young less as they reach the age to leave, becoming increasingly insensitive to their chicks’ demands for food as they grew close to fledging.
At the same time the chicks showed a marked increase in levels of the hormone corticosterone. The team wanted to know if this increase was independent of, or caused by, the reduction in feeding.
They decided to trick the parent birds, by swapping chicks of different ages between nests—which the birds make in burrows in the ground—to see how this affected both parental care and the time chicks took to fledge.
“Manx Shearwaters don’t recognize their own offspring, but will simply go back to the same nest after they’ve gathered food. They have one chick, which makes the interactions between parent and offspring easier to study,” explains Keith Hamer, researcher in the department of biological sciences at the University of Leeds.
“We swapped chicks which were between 10 days and two weeks apart in age, to see what impact it would have. We wanted to find out whether parents and chicks were responding to each other’s behavior, or whether each was acting independently.”
The team discovered that adults reduced their food provisioning after about 60 days of raising a chick, regardless of the chick’s stage of development. Although females more than males will adjust their feeding levels to how much their chicks beg for food, after around 60 days both parents start to ignore their pleas. This held true whether parents were feeding their own chicks, or foster-chicks of different ages.
The surge in corticosterone took place over the final few weeks before chicks fledged at about 70 days of age. This held true even when chicks had been fostered by parents at a different stage of the feeding cycle, so was clearly independent of the parent’s behavior and any reduction in food.
“Our findings show that young Manx Shearwaters leave home of their own accord when their corticosterone levels have reached a peak rather than as a result of changes in parental behavior,” says Hamer.
“Both parents and chicks need large energy reserves for their arduous migration across the Atlantic to South and Central America, and parents seem to reduce how much they feed their young simply to protect themselves.
“Unlike some other bird species, which let their offspring dictate the level of care, seabirds appear to weigh up the cost of a chick fledging underweight against the greater cost of losing the chance to breed again,” he adds.
“Manx Shearwaters have a breeding life of around forty years, so parents pay a high cost if they end the season too weak to complete their own migration.”
More news from University of Leeds: www.leeds.ac.uk/news
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