Transporting
Young
Much
like the stories of babies being delivered from the sky to
the bassinet by a stork, the accounts of young birds being
carried from elevated tree nests to the ground in the bill
of their mother appear to be fairy tales -- or, at best,
descriptions of very atypical behavior. Reports of chicks
jumping to the ground rather than being carried from the
nest by a parent are far more common.
Aerial carrying has been
reported in 16 species of seven waterfowl groups as well as
Virginia and Clapper Rails, gallinules, willets, woodcocks,
chachalacas, and a cuckoo. Nevertheless, ornithologists
remain uncertain of both the conditions leading to it and
how it is accomplished. Making observations is difficult,
given that aerial transport occurs either discreetly under
the cover of dim light or in panic situations when a parent
is confronted by a predator. Thus, most information remains
anecdotal. It is not clear, for example, whether a parent
holds its chick in its bill, carries it on its back, or
clutches it between its legs. In addition to aerial carrying
there are also a few reports of birds using their wings to
clap chicks to their sides and proceeding on
foot.
Much more is known about
birds that carry their young while swimming. Worldwide,
three species of swan, at least seven species of duck, and
various other birds of the wetlands have been frequently
observed chauffeuring their young as the accompanying
American Coot illustration shows. In all cases, the young
initiate the ride and are readily able to hang on by
clamping their bills over the feathers of the adult should
it decide to dive. Ferrying by adults over water is
apparently most advantageous in species that fly
infrequently, that have large bodies and small broods, and
whose young grow slowly.
Careful observations are
needed to document how frequently and under what
circumstances parent birds carry their young. But birders
fortunate enough to witness parental transport should be
cautious: some species feign carrying their young. The
Eurasian (and perhaps American) Woodcock uses this type of
distraction display to lure predators away from its chicks.
Such displays may effectively fool predators and foil their
attempts to locate young. Birders with pencil in hand need
to be careful that they, too, don't fall for this
ruse.
SEE: Parental
Care;
Distraction
Displays;
Precocial
and Altricial Young.
Copyright
® 1988 by Paul R. Ehrlich, David S. Dobkin, and Darryl
Wheye.
|