Friday, 25 March 2011

Cuckoo in egg pattern 'arms race'

By Emma Brennand
Earth News reporter

Imitation egg patterns allow cuckoo eggs to infiltrate unsuspecting nests.

Cuckoos' egg forgery skills are increasingly being put to the test, as host birds evolve better defences, say scientists.

These brood parasites, as they are called, are master deceivers - hiding their eggs in other species' nests.
To avoid detection, cuckoos have evolved to mimic colour and pattern of their favoured host birds' eggs.
But researchers have developed "bird's-eye view" models to find out how the hosts see the intruders' copycat eggs.
If host birds do not reject cuckoo eggs, the newly hatched cuckoo chick ejects other eggs from the nest by hoisting them onto its back and dumping them over the edge.

This study revealed details about the "evolutionary arms race" in which cuckoos are embroiled; as they evolve better mimicry, their hosts evolve the skills to spot these damaging intruders.
Mary Caswell Stoddard and Martin Stevens from the Department of Zoology at the University of Cambridge, UK, published their findings in the journal Evolution.
Previous egg pattern research has focused on assessing differences between colour and markings based on human visual inspection."But birds have better colour vision than humans do," Ms Stoddard told BBC News.

"Birds have four [colour-sensitive cells] known as cones in their retinas, while humans only have three."
"This additional cone in birds is sensitive to ultraviolet wavelengths [of light]. As a result, birds can see a wider range of colours than humans can."
The team used a technique called spectroscopy to measure the amount of light reflected from the different coloured egg shells.
They modelled these colour values to work out how the egg patterns appeared from a bird's perspective.

Avian invaders
Cuckoos have target hosts. For example, a cuckoo that lays eggs in a redstart nest lays a blue egg. To the human eye, this is identical to the redstart egg.

However, the cuckoo that targets a dunnock nest lays a white egg with brown speckling, visibly different from the dunnock's immaculately blue egg. Yet despite this obvious colour mismatch, dunnocks readily accept the foreign eggs, whereas redstarts are much more likely to eject the cuckoo's egg.

To investigate this optical conundrum, the team used their technique to study cuckoo and host bird eggs from 248 invaded nests held in the Natural History Museum in Tring, Hertfordshire.
They found that redstarts and their invading cuckoos' eggs had a higher degree of colour mimicry, so the cuckoo egg was a good copy.

The scientists think the cuckoos have been forced to evolve this high degree of mimicry because redstarts are better at identifying these alien eggs.
Even seen with this bird's-eye view, the cuckoos that targeted dunnocks' nests showed no colour overlap, so the forgeries were poor replicas.
The fact that the dunnock usually accepted these forgeries suggested that it lacked the defensive skills the redstart had evolved.

Exactly why many hosts accept such obviously alien eggs continues to baffle biologists.
Researchers think that naive hosts, like the dunnock, are still at early stages of the evolutionary arms race and, "they accept alien eggs, because they have not yet evolved defences against parasitism," explains Ms Stoddard.

"Another hypothesis is that tolerating cuckoo eggs may be the most stable strategy for some hosts."
So, for birds that do not often suffer cuckoo invasions, the overall "cost" of mistakenly ejecting their own eggs might be higher than the cost of tolerating the occasional parasite.

Story from BBC NEWS:
First published at BBC News - EarthNews
Read the original post at:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/earth/hi/earth_news/newsid_9418000/9418131.stm

Published: 2011/03/24 02:50:50 GMT
© BBC 2011

Monday, 7 March 2011

QR Codes

Do you use QR Codes?

A QR Code is a specific matrix barcode (or two-dimensional code), readable by dedicated QR barcode readers and camera phones. The code consists of black modules arranged in a square pattern on a white background. The information encoded can be text, URL or other data.

QR Code for the URL of 
the Yorkshire Dales Bird Guides 
main page. Note that the white 
border is part of the encoding.


















Yorkshire Dales Bird Guides now have a QR Code that links directly to our websites main web page. If you have a smart phone try scanning the above QR Code.

I use an iPhone (other smart phone are available). For scanning QR Codes I recommend the following apps.
Google Goggles as part of the Google Mobile App
or
Redlaser


Thursday, 3 March 2011

Vote for a great cause: The Yorkshire Three Peaks Route

Pen-Y-Ghent: the distinct profile of this peak

Live for the Outdoors readers will soon have the chance to pick their favourite conservation project from a selection of four worthy contenders. The winner will receive a cash award from the European Outdoor Conservation Association  - a group of businesses in the European outdoor industry that have come together to raise funds for conservation and promote care and respect for wild places. Voting will open early next week at www.lfto.com/conservation, but in the meantime we’ll be introducing you to the organisations that want to win your vote. First up, The Yorkshire Three Peaks Route project…

Why you should vote for The Yorkshire Dales Three Peaks Route
The Three Peaks is a fantastic area for walking with a lot to offer, but heavy use is causing significant damage to the internationally important peat habitat of Black Dubb Moss and Horton Moor. This project is an opportunity to restore the wildlife habitat in the area and create a better route, both excellent outcomes. By completing this missing link and promoting the new link as the best way of completing the challenge, the Three Peaks walk can become an environmentally sustainable walk. Your support will help bring this project to fruition and secure this iconic challenge for the future.

Vote Now at www.lfto.com/conservation

Read More: http://www.livefortheoutdoors.com/News-Landing/Search-Results/Outdoor-headlines/Vote-for-a-great-cause-The-Yorkshire-Three-Peaks-Route/

Rare white-tailed eagle spotted in Hampshire


An endangered bird of prey normally only seen in Britain in the far north west of Scotland has been spotted on a farm in Hampshire.

Photo: RICHARD FORD www.digitalwildlife.co.uk
The rare white-tailed eagle has a 9ft wingspan

Bird-watching enthusiasts from across the country are flocking to Old Basing, near Basingstoke, to catch a glimpse of the rare white-tailed eagle.
It is thought that the giant apex predator, which has a 9ft wingspan, arrived from Scandinavia in search of a more abundant hunting ground.
Paul Outhwaite, an RSPB spokesman, said: “It is extremely unusual to see this bird so far south in Britain or indeed anywhere outside northern Scotland.
“It is the most spectacular bird to see in the air – they’re colloquially known as ‘flying barn doors’ because of their sheer size.”
He added it is likely that the eagle, which usually feeds on fish and other birds, crossed the North Sea to escape the bitter winter in Scandinavia.

Experts believe the bird may have settled in the area due to the diverse habitat, which also boasts several rare bird species, and other raptors including red kites.
Hamish Wardrop, a farmer where the eagle has taken up residence, said: “This shows that a working farm can provide an excellent habitat for rare birdlife.
“Sadly, the council has earmarked the area as a potential site for 9,000 new homes. It would be tragic to lose such a rich slice of countryside.
The white-tailed sea eagle, as the species is also sometimes referred to, was hunted to extinction in Britain in the 19th century.
Although re-introduced in Scotland through breeding programmes, it is still included on the RSPB’s Red list of UK birds because of the long-term threat to the population.

First Published: www.telegraph.co.uk
Read More: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/wildlife/8357633/Rare-white-tailed-eagle-spotted-in-Hampshire.html

Wednesday, 2 March 2011

Bird watching gets sexy

by Katherine Hayes

Bird watching, twitching and birding are all pursuits that have not generally been associated with cupid’s arching arrow.

Similarly, if you’re a bird (the feathered kind) then it’s the time of year when the mind turns to courting and finding that all important nesting site.

Whilst the bad news is that birding watching pursuits aren’t getting any sexier, for the capital’s birds it’s a little different as thanks to 51% Studio and the Architecture Foundation, there are plenty of new places birds can raise their urban brood.
















It’s all thanks to 51% studio’s discovery that the standard hollow block used to build some of London’s most celebrated architecture is made from concrete and recycled wood shavings. Whilst this may seem unremarkable, to our winged companions, wood shavings really are the stuff of love because when used as a nest box lining, it’s proven to fledge more young than any other.

In answer to the plight of our native sparrows, wrens and other species that were once familiar sights on our island, now sadly and mysteriously, in decline, these ’love nests’ (groan) are being installed at various locations around London’s Bankside.

Intended as a permanent legacy for the London Festival of Architecture, the website to accompany the project launched, appropriately, on Valentine’s Day.

Even better is that if this news inspires you to take up the binoculars and follow our feathered friends, then you’ll be quite pleased to learn that you will earn the title of ’dude’. Now if that doesn’t make birding sexy, I don’t know what does.


First Published
Read more: http://www.bdonline.co.uk/bird-watching-gets-sexy/5013291.blog#ixzz1FTAvuMaN
BDonline.co.uk
Under Creative Commons License: Attribution


Yorkshire Dales Bird Guides - New Blog Format

In preparation for the new season we are currently testing a new format for updating our blog  within our main website Yorkshire Dales Bird Guides Hopefully this should allow for more regular updates.