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Of swallows and adaptation

Last Updated 25 March 2013, 13:27 IST

Roadside-nesting cliff swallows have evolved shorter, more maneuverable wings, which may have helped them to make hasty retreats from oncoming vehicles, according to a study published in Current Biology.

The study’s authors discovered the trend after noticing that the number of vehicle-killed birds had declined over the past three decades. “I’m not saying that it’s all because of wing length,” says Charles Brown, a biologist at the University of Tulsa in Oklahoma and one of the authors of the study. But, he says, the shortening does support the idea that the birds are adapting to disturbed environments.

Together with Mary Bomberger Brown, a ornithologist at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Brown tracked roadside populations of cliff swallows in western Nebraska for 30 years, mostly to study the birds social behaviours within their colonies. These birds winter in South America but breed in North America, in colonies of up to 12,000 adults.

As the two researchers checked the roadside colonies, Brown, an amateur taxidermist, collected dead swallows for skinning and stuffing — gathering 104 vehicle-killed adults and 134 adults killed accidentally in nets used for the study. When he and Bomberger Brown noticed a decline in the annual number of roadkills — even though the overall population was increasing — they compared the wing measurements of both types of stuffed bird.

The team discovered that vehicle-killed birds had longer wings than birds that died in nets, and that while the wings of the vehicle-killed birds had lengthened over time, those of the net-killed birds, which represented the general population, had shortened.

Escape strategy

Brown says that there is evidence that shorter wings make the animals more agile: “They can make a 90 degree turn more rapidly,” he says. That would help the birds to dodge traffic as they exit or enter their nesting sites, Brown explains. And that in turn would enable them to survive and produce more short-winged offspring. The researchers tried to rule out other factors that might have explained the decline in roadkill, but acknowledge that it might have been caused by behavioural changes, such as the birds learning to avoid cars.

Taxidermist Johannes Erritzoe at the House of Birdresearch in Christiansfeld, Denmark, has also noticed a decline in the number of vehicle-killed birds around Denmark, and suspects natural selection.

It is hard to definitely prove that animals are adapting to living around roads, says behavioural ecologist Colleen St Clair at the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Canada. But, she says “this is the best demonstration that they do have that capacity.”

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(Published 25 March 2013, 13:27 IST)

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