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@shiny-eyed-crow
“Adaptations of the bills of birds.” The science of biology. 1952.
Internet Archive
Behold, birds who have lost the ability to can!
Just kidding, guys. These birds are just trolling the hell out of ants. I really, really wanted to show you this clip of a Galapagos finch or something harassing the shit out of formica ants and then being all “Yes, yes, bathe me in your fury! Your chemical defenses are now my own! Mwahahahaha!”, but the closest thing I could find is this video of David Attenborough pissing off some wood ants. It was basically like that, only instead of an Englishman with a stick, it was a bird stomping around with its wings spread just being an absolute asshole about everything.
This behavior is actually called anting, and there are two types of anting that birds can engage in. One is just anting, where birds will rub ants all over themselves to get that precious, precious formic acid all up in their feathers. They’ll also do it with mothballs, cigarette butts, and certain sorts of beetles and millipedes. The other one is passive anting, where a particularly lazy bird will find an anthill and just flop down on it with all their feathers spread and puffed and annoy the ants until they hop to and try to make them leave, at which point the bird rubs its wings together and goes “Yeeeeeess.”
They do this to get rid of external parasites, because external parasites are annoying. Ant-eating birds who do this are getting a two-for deal out of it, because they get the ants to empty their acid sacs in a beneficial location (the bird’s feathers) and then get to eat them without having to deal with the acid in their crops, so it’s basically like if your bug-spray or deoderant came in a bacon bottle.
Formica ants get the brunt of this, because they’re super-common and quite frequently spray the acid instead of trying to inject it, so the bird can get itself doused and then preen it into its feathers. Considering the spraying of acid is like the ant way of saying “Oh my god go away you dickhead I hate you we all hate you why are you still here jesus christ what is wrong with you,” we can be reasonably sure that they’re not super-thrilled by this bird behavior. Since the birds keep doing it, we can be reasonably sure that they don’t care about the ants’ feelings.
I can’t stop laughing at the text Why can’t every science book be written like this?
Corvids have a basic grasp of the theory of mind - the ones who hide their food will remember who saw them bury it, and will come back to stash it elsewhere when they know they’re no longer watched. They are vaguely aware that others are also capable of thinking and planning, and anticipate that another bird would seize the treasure later, if ever given the opportunity.
Many corvids also mate for life. They have foods they prefer more than others, and it has been discovered that they can also know and remember their partner’s favourites, and bring those treats to each other, even if they personally don’t care for this food source.
Is that love? A crow cannot be forced to do something it does not want to do, they do as they please and it pleases them to bring gifts to their partners. What is love but joy that stems from the joy of another?
Do they know what love is? A jackdaw knows that another jackdaw it can see has seen it in return - do they know that a spouse that brings them treats does it as a treat to themselves as well?
Do these birds know what love is? Do they know that they love, and are loved in return?
lahore pigeons are some of the most visually appealing birds out there. like in terms of visual design. very minimalist, good contrast.
Too bad Lahore pigeons are a domestic breed and don’t appear in the wild at all. Some equally balanced wild colorations include
Pygmy Falcon
Great Hornbill
Wallcreeper
and
Black-throated Loon
this is a good addition to this post. thank you for this birds educations
I would like to submit the following additions to the world of exceptional bird color design:
Cedar Waxwing
Red Crowned Crane
Brahminy Kite
Green Tree Swallow (I mean seriously - those are metallic teal feathers against stark white. Damn.)
Bali Mynah
And, last but certainly not least, the cutest fucking puffball on this planet earth:
The Korean Crow-Tit
I’d also like to contribute some pretty awesome birds
Hooded Pitta (or as like to call them little olives)
Coua
Mot-Mot
The Blue Crown Pigeon (the biggest pigeon)
good post
@ilovegirlsalways
@candiceirae
I’m fond of the Golden Breasted Starling,
the Golden Pheasant,
and the Oriental Dwarf Kingfisher.
@izzyovercoffee
May I present the most fabulous turkey in the world, the Ocellated Turkey?
@poisonedapples
They’re all immensely pretty
@todaysbird
So colour!! I love them!
@waffity @hope-2san
beloveds all of them
saving for refs <3 Thanks for tagging!
I love how both corvids and parrots are in general highly intelligent, but where corvids generally have strict hierarchies, solve disagreements in the pecking order by fighting, and have a strong dislike for anything new or foreign until they figure out how to make use of it, parrots are just here to party.
The New Caledonian crow, who knows how to specifically build a tool in order to build another tool, never engages in play. These motherfuckers are smarter than some people with the right to vote, and they are Extremely Serious Birds. They don't have time to play, they got work to do and kids to raise.
And then there's the kea, straight-up titled "clown of the mountains", that has a specific vocalization for "playtime!". Scientists decided to try what happens if they play the Play Call for two fully-grown adult keas that are together in an area and can clearly see there is no other, third kea to make the call, and they just go "great idea, disembodied voice! it's TIME TO FUCKING PARTY!" and start wrestling.
Imagine working really hard in order to make it into a top university to study astrophysics, making it to your first Very Serious Class, sitting down full of serious determination, and the dude next to you is taking notes without using his hands, with a glitter pen he's shoved up his nose. And his notes are good.
It's your first day of Bird University and you already fucking hate this guy.
So there's this gene in humans called PLXNC1 or "Plexin", right? So Plexin is associated with increased neuron function and is generally thought to be correlated to human's increased cognitive ability for the use of language, i.e., "language learning". Super cool, right?
Humans aren't the only animals with advanced language learning that have Plexin in their genome. We can actually find homologous plexin between humans and PARROTS!
Using genomic alignment search tools, we can actually break down the sequence of human Plexin and directly compare it to the Plexin found in parrots. (This was actually a project I ran for an upper division genomics class, and running the program literally takes like... ten minutes.) I wanted to see how similar the plexin gene was between humans and parrots, so I queued up the human sequence against all of the available records from parrot genomes and sorted by greatest percent identity (i.e., which bird species had the closest plexin to ours?)
It was this funky dude right here:
THAT'S RIGHT BABY! The kea, notorious for being a straight up motherfucking prank god, carries Plexin with a 79.42% identity comapred to humans'.
THIS LITTLE ASSHOLE HAS A HOMOLOGOUS LANGUAGE LEARNING GENE WITH US!!!! A GENE THAT IS THOUGHT TO BE CORRELATED TO HIGHER LEVEL LEARNING AND INTELLIGENCE!!!!! AND THEY USE THEIR INTELLIGENCE TO WREAK HAVOC ON TOURISTS
Also these guys have been found to literally have predictive reasoning skills, which we consider REALLY FUCKING ADVANCED for a lot of animal species. They pass the Aesop's fable test with flying colors. They're so goddamn cool, I love them so much. The kea really said: "I will use my superior intelligence to have a good fucking time" and that's so powerful honestly
“Is it already Sunday?”, Buchfink asked. And then, he decided that all he wanted to do was be lazy for the rest of the day.
Buchfink ♂️ (chaffinch) auf der Karlshöhe, Stuttgart-Süd.
[Species] | Groove-billed ani
Groove-billed anis (Crotophaga sulcirostris) are tropical, partially migratory birds that occur from coastal Ecuador, Peru and Venezuela to Mexico, the Bahamas and southern bits of the USA. Only the northernmost populations in Texas and northern Mexico migrate during the winter.
On average groove-billed anis are 34 centimetres long and weigh somewhere in-between 70 and 90 grams. Their plumage, which is entirely black, makes them look little like their relatives in the cuckoo order, but they share the same toe arrangement called zygodactylous, where two toes point forwards and two point backwards. Other birds that share this arrangement are woodpeckers and parrots.
Groove-billed anis occur mostly in thick brush, overgrown pastures and in the northern parts of their distribution also dense thickets close to open grassland, marshes or forest edges. Further down in the tropics they inhabit any kind of semi-open lowland habitat, strictly avoiding unbroken forest.
Like willie-wagtails, groove-billed anis have long tails that they twitch and flip around quickly, likely to startle insect prey into flushing. They also forage by merely hopping and running on the ground, or by gleaning food-items from bushes. They, like other members of their order, closely associate with cattle in open pastures to take animals flushed by the larger animals. They will also follow swarms of army ants to eat the insects or other creatures flushed by them.
Their diet consists mostly of large insects, such as grasshoppers, beetles and others. They may be beneficial to the cattle they follow around in that they take external parasites from them. Their diet is supplemented by spiders, lizards and various other small creatures, as well as small fruits and berries.
The male feeds the female during courtship. They, like the other two species of ani, live in small groups of 2 to 5 breeding pairs who defend a single territory and lay their eggs in one communal nest. A group may include extra non-breeding adults that help raising the chicks.
Each female in a group lays 3 - 4 pale blue eggs on average. All adults incubate the eggs, with dominant males, or males in general doing it more throughout the night. The incubation period lasts 13 to 14 days. The young are fed by all adults and begin climbing out of the nest roughly 6 to 7 days after hatching, and make their first flight attempts after 10 days, with them being capable of proper flight roughly 7 days later.
The populations in the USA are likely stable, whereas the more tropical populations like have been increasing over the last few decades as the clearing of forests gives them more habitat to reside in. The IUCN evaluates the species to be one of least concern.
Photo credits: Nick Carson, Mario E. Campos S, Becky Matsubara
[Species] | Groove-billed ani
Groove-billed anis (Crotophaga sulcirostris) are tropical, partially migratory birds that occur from coastal Ecuador, Peru and Venezuela to Mexico, the Bahamas and southern bits of the USA. Only the northernmost populations in Texas and northern Mexico migrate during the winter.
On average groove-billed anis are 34 centimetres long and weigh somewhere in-between 70 and 90 grams. Their plumage, which is entirely black, makes them look little like their relatives in the cuckoo order, but they share the same toe arrangement called zygodactylous, where two toes point forwards and two point backwards. Other birds that share this arrangement are woodpeckers and parrots.
Groove-billed anis occur mostly in thick brush, overgrown pastures and in the northern parts of their distribution also dense thickets close to open grassland, marshes or forest edges. Further down in the tropics they inhabit any kind of semi-open lowland habitat, strictly avoiding unbroken forest.
Like willie-wagtails, groove-billed anis have long tails that they twitch and flip around quickly, likely to startle insect prey into flushing. They also forage by merely hopping and running on the ground, or by gleaning food-items from bushes. They, like other members of their order, closely associate with cattle in open pastures to take animals flushed by the larger animals. They will also follow swarms of army ants to eat the insects or other creatures flushed by them.
Their diet consists mostly of large insects, such as grasshoppers, beetles and others. They may be beneficial to the cattle they follow around in that they take external parasites from them. Their diet is supplemented by spiders, lizards and various other small creatures, as well as small fruits and berries.
The male feeds the female during courtship. They, like the other two species of ani, live in small groups of 2 to 5 breeding pairs who defend a single territory and lay their eggs in one communal nest. A group may include extra non-breeding adults that help raising the chicks.
Each female in a group lays 3 - 4 pale blue eggs on average. All adults incubate the eggs, with dominant males, or males in general doing it more throughout the night. The incubation period lasts 13 to 14 days. The young are fed by all adults and begin climbing out of the nest roughly 6 to 7 days after hatching, and make their first flight attempts after 10 days, with them being capable of proper flight roughly 7 days later.
The populations in the USA are likely stable, whereas the more tropical populations like have been increasing over the last few decades as the clearing of forests gives them more habitat to reside in. The IUCN evaluates the species to be one of least concern.
Photo credits: Nick Carson, Mario E. Campos S, Becky Matsubara
Crows journal page :)
being a crow you’d think i’d spam your dash with shit posts and nonsense and a few prophecies but no. i’m quiet here because i’m busy doing that in REAL life
Why is the American opossum apperently the most relatively ugly? Some are downright cute! But the aquatic one and the ones in Australia are so much prettier and skinnier! Why ours so funky?
fun fact, marsupials actually originated in South America, which used to be connected to Australia via Antarctica.
marsupials colonized both antarctica and australia, but about 30 million years ago the three continents broke up and went their separate ways, ending up where they are today.
obviously things didn’t end well for the antarctic marsupials, who died out, but australian marsupials pretty much had it made! they were the first mammals to colonize the continent and they didn’t face competition from placental mammals until much much later, in the modern era.
south american marsupials, however.
when south america eventually drifted north to slam into north america like a wayward bowling ball, the Great American Biotic Interchange happened! which is a fancy way of saying that animals who had before been limited to a single continent now had the run of the whole western hemisphere, and entire species rampaged back and forth over the new central american land bridge for millions of years in an intercontinental evolutionary war.
and unfortunately, it was a war the south american marsupials lost. they were outrun, outgunned, and just all-around outcompeted by the north american placental mammals, who took their place in the south american ecosystems as things finally began to settle down.
all but one, anyway!
in the confusion, opossums had managed to move north and establish a foothold for themselves in north america, making them the sole marsupial survivors of the Great American Biotic Interchange war. today, they can be found across all of the americas!
they’ve been out of contact with the rest of opossum-dom for well over 30 million years, and that’s why they look so different from the modern australian possums. show some respect to these tenacious survivors!
Trash Bandits
“Kyle, chill they just want a picture before they help us out.”
I almost forgot to mention: this woman came into the penguin enclosure with a KESTREL??? I said “oh my god is that an American Kestrel?” and she said “Yes! She was outside doing raptor education for the kids, but she doesn’t like to get rained on.”
#she was watching the penguins with what I will anthropomorphically project as skepticism
kestrel: i hate rained on!!
human: here is birds in water
kestrel: ……no…..
Ne çiçek açmayacak yara, ne de geçmeyecek acı var bu hayatta.🍀
@buglem-k
Hello! I went on a walk and saw many many different kinds of flowers just on my street alone. Have some Canadian spring for the soul!
! !!! ! Look at those colours!!! That sunshine!! !! Oh my!!!! A parallel universe. Oh these are beautys. Thank you.
We get 3 (three) photographable days per season between weather and construction, so you have to make the best of them! But I do enjoy them a lot. Here are some extras that wouldn't fit in the ask!
@boggblog please everyone needs to see your very correct statement