Birds
must spend a great deal of time caring for their feathers,
since their lives depend on them. Preening, bathing,
dusting, and other feather care operations, however, cannot
prevent the feathers from wearing out. Because formed
feathers (like our fingernails) are lifeless, horny
structures, incapable of being repaired, worn feathers must
be replaced. This process of replacement is termed molting.
The old, worn feathers are loosened in their follicles
(sockets) by the growth of new intruding feathers, which
eventually push them out. Molting occurs in regular patterns
over a bird's body. The adaptiveness of such patterns can be
illustrated by the arboreal woodpeckers, which retain the
key inner pair of long tail feathers used in bracing and
climbing until the outer feathers have been replaced. This
is the reverse of the pattern found in most birds, which
molt tail feathers from the center of the tail first, and
then progressively toward each side. The majority of adult
birds molt once or twice a year, and the temporal pattern,
not unexpectedly, is related to the wear rate on the
feathers. Feathers of species that migrate enormous
distances or live in thick brush, dodging among twigs and
spines, wear more rapidly than those of birds resident in
one place or live in open country. The former tend to molt
twice a year, and the latter only once. Molting is timed to meet
various needs. For example, resident temperate-zone birds
require more insulating feathers in the winter than in the
summer. The number is changed in the process of molting;
winter plumage may contain more than half again as many
feathers as summer plumage. Since the feathers, which carry
the colors of birds, are "dead," a bird cannot totally
change its colors without changing its feathers (although
its appearance can change substantially just from wear).
Therefore a male bird usually molts into his most colorful
plumage prior to the breeding season. Molting in most
passerines takes from 5 to 12 weeks, but some raptors may
require two years or more to completely replace their
feathers. Some birds, such as ducks,
swans, grebes, pelicans, and auks, are "synchronous molters
-- they change their feathers all at once in a period as
short as two weeks, but sometimes stretching over a month.
During this period, they cannot fly, and males, in
particular, often complete the process on secluded lakes in
order to minimize their vulnerability to
predators. Why should synchronous
molters have evolved this seemingly risky process instead of
undergoing a gradual molt like most birds? These birds tend
to be heavy relative to their wing surfaces -- they have
high "wing loadings." The loss of only a few flight feathers
would seriously compromise their flying ability, and so
evolution has favored being grounded for a "quick overhaul"
rather than a longer period of difficult flying. SEE: The
Color of Birds. Copyright
® 1988 by Paul R. Ehrlich, David S. Dobkin, and Darryl
Wheye.