Archive for the 'birds' Category

Tundra swallows take out the honey bucket

After 15 good years, the Dog Who Smiles (Tewa terrier, from Española to Bethel) developed kidney disease. Among her contributions to innumerable neighbor kids, alpaca camp, her cat, and myself, she left just as the swallows were arriving. For the first time I could put up a bird box, jerryrigged but evidently acceptable.

The box is placed on the north side of the house to keep it from getting too hot. There is a hinge so I can clean the box after the birds leave, about the 2nd or 3rd week in July (keeps pests and parasites down for next year.) I still don’t know why the birds start so many nests in different boxes and why so many birds try to build in the same box. It’s also hard to tell who the parents are supposed to be as there seems to be more than one pair involved with this box. I recorded the sounds from the box and the approaching adults, but it is tedious to edit so will provide a link later.

The mud swallows come later than these swallows which are among the earliest birds to arrive and they therefore leave about 2 weeks later. I once had the mud swallows build in a hole in the west wall of the house, but only that once.

For some reason, I and others around town have noticed fewer birds, big and little, than in years past. It’s not just because people build on the tundra or fill in the ponds or drive too fast on the dirt roads. Maybe it is just this colder spring.

Sanitation is important to birds and other animals like us. Click on these images to see the larger versions.

approachlanding0116.jpg

approachlanding0124

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This bird is carrying out the fecal sack from the nest. I used the binoculars one time to watch as one adult arrived. The adult inside the box deftly turned and neatly defecated the anuk bag so the arriving adult could take it away.

fecalsack1-0107

Fecal bag. When I have been watching, the birds will take the sack out of sight behind the neighbors, towards the tundra pond (”naturally constructed wetlands system”)

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Fecal splat. The usual kind of bird dropping.

part of the Toilets and trash in the Last Frontier (Alaska) (Pool) at Flickr


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Witches britches and Alaska tumbleweeds

Just in the past couple of weeks, some of those in Bethel got appalled at the number of plastic grocery bags they have trapped in the bushes around the city dump [ Massive trashy tundra clean up effort planned]

Beautiful Bethel beaches Beautiful Bethel beaches (Sadowski & Froehlich) is the same city that refused to ban the little fly-by-nights a couple of years ago because a few folks ordering delivery lunch wanted them. This is the same public works that ordered new dumpsters that are too tall for folks to use, especially children. This is the same landfill, adjacent to the giant septic pond unlined sewage lagoon, which for years did not use daily cover; the same dump/pond which feeds the gulls and the ravens all year round.

see related entries–

China targets plastic bags http://link.latimes.com/r/0Q7X8Z/A75RX/S1MZ9L/6245/NPR1J/LE/h
By Mark Magnier
A ban on the thinnest goes into effect in June. Some wonder how effective it will be.

Earth Matters: Bags don’t have to be ubiquitous
Mona Blaber | The New Mexican1/25/2008 - 1/26/08

Last summer, I decided to go bag-neutral. Armed with a mountain of sacks from previous purchases, I vowed never to take another bag.

It went well until I actually bought something. I walked into a salon intending to buy just a brush and walked out with a brush, two jumbo bottles of shampoo and conditioner and one plastic bag. Before the day was out, I slipped up again, forgetting until it was too late that a Subway sandwich means a plastic bag unless you speak up.

Plastic bags are convenient and difficult to avoid; conservation groups estimate that between 80 billion and 100 billion are given to consumers every year in the United States. Those 100 billion bags require about 12 million barrels of oil to manufacture and take up to 1,000 years to break down. Standard plastic bags don’t biodegrade. They photodegrade, … Even when properly disposed of, the sacks can fly away and sully the landscape. In South Africa, where they’re now banned, they’re so ubiquitous as litter they’re called the national flower…

The industry also argues that plastic bags are more environmentally friendly than paper, because paper uses trees and requires more energy in manufacture and transport, which is true, according to a study by the Institute for Lifecycle Environmental Assessment. That’s the point: If we use our own bags, we don’t need either. Paper and plastic both use precious resources and energy, contributing to carbon emissions and climate change. [...]

http://www.santafenewmexican.com/HealthandScience/Bags_don_t_have_to_be_ubiquitous

Old shipping crates reborn as Taloyoak garbage bins
Last Updated: Friday, January 25, 2008 CBC News

A Nunavut community has found an innovative use for discarded wooden crates from barge shipments: make them into badly needed garbage bins for residents… Covers on the new bins prevent ravens and dogs from getting into people’s garbage, a major problem… [...]

http://www.cbc.ca/canada/north/story/2008/01/25/tal-boxes.html?ref=rss

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It’s not just godwits that are antipodean

Amazing fish tag journey. Scientists are trying to figure out how an electronic fish tag implanted in a steelhead at a Washington fish hatchery made its way to New Zealand, where in April it was found in the belly of a sooty shearwater chick, according to an Associated Press story. The tag had traveled 7,700 miles. “We know (the tag) went into the ocean, and we know it ended up in New Zealand,” said Dave Marvin, who tracks Columbia River PIT tags for the Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission in Portland. “But what happened in between is speculation.”


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Godwits, godwits, godwits

Track their progress yourself–
2008 Bar-tailed Godwit Updates
and their progress against the sea ice melting Where is… ice pack and the tundra thawing, Where is… breakup freezeup

Scientists track bar-tailed godwits on marathon migration to and from Alaska
By GEORGE BRYSON Anchorage Daily News
Published: March 31st, 2008 12:02 AM
Last Modified: March 31st, 2008
http://www.adn.com/front/story/360937.html

Previously noted–
The godwits are coming
More on the godwits
Our birds Polynesia
YK Bird Study Protocol
Birds sampled 1988-2004


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Updates on bird flu results, USA AK (HEDDS)

HPAI Early Detection Data System (HEDDS)
It’s only been just a little while since the official bird flu testing results in the USA have been provided in a much easier format to receive and review. This is very good news. The mailing list is one way to review the latest data. Another is to use their RSS feeds.

Just as a reminder–
HPAI is highly pathogenic avian influenza (particularly the H5N1 strain)
LPAI is low pathogenic avian influenza
“Bird flu” of the pandemic concern (H5N1) HAS been detected in wild birds in the USA and North America. It is of low pathogenicity (LPAI).

Complex Bird Flu Testing summary
Dirty Jobs in Bethel, goose butts
Sampling Bird Cloaca
Avian Influenza among NorAm Waterfowl Hunters and Wildlife Professionals

National HPAI Early Detection Data System (HEDDS) Update Monday, Feb 18, 2008
This email contains text only. To view map and for easy-to-read formatting, go to:
http://wildlifedisease.nbii.gov/documents/National HPAI Early Detection Data System (HEDDS) Sample Totals Update Feb 18 2008.pdf (pdf file)

**Note: After 30 days, this link will no longer be available. You are welcome to save a copy locally for research or education purposes.

Totals for 2007

New samples with test results added since February 11 for the 2007 Sampling
Session: 187

Total samples tested and reported for 2007: 84,530

Highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza virus has NOT been detected in these
samples.

Totals for 2006

As of February 11, 2008, no new samples with test results were added to
HEDDS.

Total samples tested and reported for 2006: 164,553

Highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza virus has NOT been detected in these
samples.

Surveillance news

Feb 15, 2008: The LPAI H5N1 table has been updated with information on results from a sample collected from a American black duck in Tuscola, MI on Nov 4, 2007.

Feb 15, 2008: The LPAI H5N1 table has been updated with information on results from a sample collected from a Mallard in Erie, PA on Oct 29, 2007.

Feb 15, 2008: The LPAI H5N1 table has been updated with information on results from a sample collected from a Mallard (#1) in Kent, DE on Nov 19, 2007.

Feb 15, 2008: The LPAI H5N1 table has been updated with information on results from a sample collected from a Mallard (#2) in Kent, DE on Nov 19, 2007.

Feb 15, 2008: The LPAI H5N1 table has been updated with information on results from a sample collected from a American black duck in Kent, DE on Nov 20, 2007.

Feb 15, 2008: 187 samples and tests were added to HEDDS for 2007. Total is now 84,530.

Feb 13, 2008: The LPAI H5N1 results table has been updated with information on samples collected on Jan 29, 2008 from a Unknown in Jefferson county, AR.

Additional information on Surveillance News items can be found at the following links:

USDA Avian Influenza Homepage -
http://www.usda.gov/wps/portal/usdahome?navtype=SU&navid=AVIAN_INFLUENZA

DOI News - http://www.doi.gov/news.html

Other links: This message is from the HEDDS-News mailing list.

HEDDS
http://wildlifedisease.nbii.gov/ai/

LPAI H5N1 Results Table
http://wildlifedisease.nbii.gov/ai/LPAITable.pdf (pdf file)

National Wildlife Health Center - Avian Influenza News
http://www.nwhc.usgs.gov/disease_information/avian_influenza/avian_influenza_news.jsp

Wildlife Disease Information Node – Select Avian Influenza News Sources
http://wildlifedisease.nbii.gov/diseaseresource.jsp?disease=Avian%20Influenza&section=News&pagemode=submit

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

The HEDDS-News Mailing List is a component of the NBII Wildlife Disease Information Node

See related posts–
Where is… bird test results
Results Birds and Influenza from Asia into Alaska
Frozen fecal bird flu types
Results: 2006 Alaska Avian Influenza Surveillance
another result on our birds
Where is… Bethel and 2007 bird flu
Accessible bird results
results, maybe
LPAI (H5N1) in mallards, confirmed from Maryland
White House: Lesser Bird Flu May Be Here
YKHC: H5N1 bird test results
Villagers living in bird flu’s flight path
Experts will test birds for signs of avian flu


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Climate change and disease — Talk of Alaska

Steve Heimel is scheduled to host a discussion tomorrow (2007 Dec 4) about the possible disease impacts (positive and negative) of environmental change in Alaska. Talk of Alaska is broadcast live statewide on the stations of the Alaska Public Radio Network each Tuesday at 10:00 a.m. Audio from the program is [usually] posted online following the live broadcast. [Fran Ulmer's program from 2007 Nov 20 is uncharacteristically not up yet.]

I’ve mentioned several potential problems here, which I hope get discussed –

Another strong possibility might be dengue fever. Parts of Maui, for example, have been under mosquito control measures and health alerts. Dengue fever is another mosquito-borne disease, but of aedes mosquitoes, not the anopheles mosquitoes which carry malaria. Does anyone know the abundance and proportion of our mosquito genera? We have culex mosquitoes (“West Nile virus is spread by mosquitoes such as this one, Culex pipiens, also known as the northern house mosquito.”) There is a catalog of The mosquitoes of Alaska [pdf file] but published in 1961 and new ones are found ( http://tinyurl.com/2835kf)

The reasons for the dramatic global emergence of DF/DHF as a major public health problem are complex and not well understood. However, several important factors can be identified.

1. First, major global demographic changes have occurred, the most important of which have been uncontrolled urbanization and concurrent population growth. These demographic changes have resulted in substandard housing and inadequate water, sewer, and waste management systems, all of which increase Ae. aegypti population densities and facilitate transmission of Ae. aegypti-borne disease.
2. In most countries the public health infrastructure has deteriorated. Limited financial and human resources and competing priorities have resulted in a “crisis mentality” with emphasis on implementing so-called emergency control methods in response to epidemics rather than on developing programs to prevent epidemic transmission. This approach has been particularly detrimental to dengue control because, in most countries, surveillance is (just as in the U.S.) passive; the system to detect increased transmission normally relies on reports by local physicians who often do not consider dengue in their differential diagnoses. As a result, an epidemic has often reached or passed its peak before it is recognized.
3. Increased travel by airplane provides the ideal mechanism for infected human transport of dengue viruses between population centers of the tropics, resulting in a frequent exchange of dengue viruses and other pathogens.
4. Lastly, effective mosquito control is virtually nonexistent in most dengue-endemic countries. Considerable emphasis in the past has been placed on ultra-low-volume insecticide space sprays for adult mosquito control, a relatively ineffective approach for controlling Ae. aegypti.

We don’t do any mosquito control now except burn Pics inside houses (negatively affects human health so the outdoor mozzies get us faster) and provide sheltered breeding areas such as trash and tires. Mosquitoes may also bring heartworms which affect dogs. And how can we forget flies and SWMP flying anuk?

There is pandemic and avian influenzas–

[while the current Arctic and sub-Arctic regions may result in a lower population density of birds and their shed viruses (and also people) it is the lower density and not the “Arctic” per se which affects the infection rate of the virus. However, the lower density may be only of the birds. Other research [cited here, flu viruses survive tundra ponds and here, Frozen fecal bird flu types] has shown that the viruses may survive in ponds between breeding seasons (over winter) and thus might accumulate or become more concentrated in numbers. As we know from disease ecology and biocultural anthropology, the disease process involves several factors besides presence and abundance of the infective microorganism. mpb]

While snow blindness may be less likely, cataracts from exposure to more sunlight (getting out on water without sunglasses) and skin cancers may compensate. Elk may move in, but so might chronic wasting disease. If winters are warmer, then indoor air pollution may drop with decreased wood stove and oil furnaces.

I’m sure Steve will have lots of other skin-crawly things to discuss (and to prepare for).


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US seizes Canadian geese for bird flu

An exciting headline but bizarre happening. There is a devastating bird flu epidemic in Canada, of H7N3 one of the varieties which has struck the US in the past several years, among other places. However, USDA APHIS confused their response. Add this to the confused response (early 2006) and preparations we’ve had in Alaska and it makes one queasy.

The current highly pathogenic flu is specific to birds, primarily domestic birds. It can be lethal to domestic birds or otherwise make them too sick for market.

This form of the virus does have the potential to evolve or mutate into a form infectious to humans. This is a low probability. See the ProMed article below for more details.

U.S. border agents seize hunters’ birds amid Canada’s bird flu scare
http://canadianpress.google.com/article/ALeqM5h67G39MWQ33ZzdaJ-P9S0qKYsX_g
9 hours ago

ST. PAUL, Minn. - U.S. Customs officials in Minnesota and North Dakota seized more than 4,100 birds from hunters re-entering the United States from Canada following an outbreak of avian flu at a commercial chicken farm near Regina….

On Thursday, the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Animal Plant Health Inspection Service banned all imports of poultry and unprocessed bird products and customs agents were told the ban included hunter-killed birds…. The confiscated birds were sent to landfills. Birds also were confiscated at border crossings in Montana and at Canadian airports.

Agriculture Department officials rescinded the order on hunter-killed birds late Saturday night after reviewing their protocols….

“Biologically, it makes no sense whatsoever,” said Michael Chamberlain, a professor at Louisiana State University. “They were saying you can’t transport a hunter-killed bird across the border, when millions of birds are migrating across the border already?”

While the Saskatchewan avian influenza is not the H5N1 virus that has caused worldwide alarm, USDA officials said the H7N3 virus is a considerable threat to commercial poultry farms. [...]

ProMed The outbreak of H7N3 in Canada
Date: 27 Sep 2007 Source: Canadian Food Inspection Agency [edited] http://www.inspection.gc.ca/english/corpaffr/newcom/2007/20070927e.shtml

Avian influenza detected in Saskatchewan

Highly pathogenic H7N3 avian influenza has been detected in a commercial poultry operation in Saskatchewan, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) announced today [27 Sep 2007]. This virus is not the same as the strain circulating in Asia, Africa and Europe, which has been associated with human illness. H7N3 is not normally associated with serious human illness….

Once all birds have been removed, the CFIA will oversee the cleaning and disinfection of the barns, vehicles, equipment and tools to eliminate any infectious material that may remain.

To limit any potential virus spread, the CFIA will apply restrictions on the movement of poultry and poultry products within three kilometres [1.86 miles] of the infected premises. As an additional safeguard, any poultry operations within ten kilometres [6.2 miles] of the infected premises will be closely and regularly monitored for signs of illness….

The CFIA’s actions are consistent with internationally recognized animal health guidelines and the CFIA’s established avian influenza response protocols.

It may be difficult to identify the source of the virus, but the possibility of exposure to wild waterfowl — which are the natural hosts for the virus — cannot be discounted. Poultry owners are urged to take an active role in protecting their flocks by keeping them away from wild birds and areas frequented by wild birds….

- –
Communicated by:
[2] Date: 29 Sep 2007 From: Dr. Emily Jenkins and Dr. Catherine Soos [The following post is in reference to ProMED-mail post 20070928.3210 - Mod.TG]

The current outbreak in Saskatchewan poultry has been linked to a highly pathogenic strain of H7N3 avian influenza ( http://www.inspection.gc.ca/english/corpaffr/newcom/2007/20070927e.shtml).

The H7N3 strain of avian influenza is a potential zoonosis with low risk of transmission, causing mild conjunctivitis in 2 heavily exposed people in the 2004 outbreak of highly pathogenic H7N3 in the Fraser Valley, British Columbia, Canada. The concern, of course, is that people co-infected with avian and human influenza viruses could serve as mixing vessels for viral recombination and subsequent development of human adapted, virulent strains of influenza.

Wild birds are frequently implicated in outbreaks of avian influenza in poultry, often with little or no supporting evidence (Please reference ProMED-mail post 20051124.3409).

Highly pathogenic strains are not commonly carried in migratory waterfowl; indeed the recent highly pathogenic H5N1 outbreak in Eurasia is an anomaly in that wild birds may be acting as carriers and victims of a highly pathogenic strain of avian influenza. Wild birds are the natural hosts of low pathogenicity strains, which can mutate into high pathogenicity strains in intensively managed poultry. As such, enhanced biosecurity to prevent bidirectional spillover between wild and domestic birds is well warranted, but speculation about the source of the virus in this outbreak is premature pending epidemiological and molecular characterization.

Investigation into the source of the virus will be facilitated by recent surveillance for avian influenza in 1000 wild ducks in southern Saskatchewan in August 2007, which occurred as a part of Canada’s Interagency Wild Bird Influenza Survey, in collaboration with the United States Department of Agriculture to enhance surveillance in the Central Flyway. Results from 2007 are pending.

In 2006, no H5 or H7 strains were detected in samples from 56 ducks (primarily northern pintails) in southern Saskatchewan, although there were 6 positives for non H5/H7, low pathogenicity influenza A viruses (based on PCR). Canada-wide, no H7 subtypes or highly pathogenic strains were detected in 4268 samples from wild ducks in 2005, nor in over 12,000 samples from wild birds in Canada in 2006: http://wildlife1.usask.ca/en/aiv/index.php

At the moment, there appears to be no scientific justification for increased concern over the avian influenza status of hunter-killed wild birds in Saskatchewan, including export to the USA. Resident and non-resident hunting of wild waterfowl is a major activity in Saskatchewan at this time of year. As usual, hunters should observe common sense food safety and handling precautions: http://www.phac-aspc.gc.ca/influenza/fs-hwb-fr-mos_e.html

ProMED-mail is a program of the International Society for Infectious Diseases. Read the previous reports here.
http://www.isid.org


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Dirty Jobs in Bethel, goose butts

[revised]
I don’t have cable or satellite (one of the few) so I’ll try to see this at a friend’s house. He came out this spring to do some of the H5N1 bird flu or avian influenza monitoring in the Kuskokwim Delta (Yukon Delta National Wildlife Refuge, http://yukondelta.fws.gov/ Unfortunately, none of the links work there, except to download a map in pdf and neither do most links at http://alaska.fws.gov/index.htm )

Let’s see if he uses PPE, photo here
Experts will test birds for signs of avian flu or see photo here, Swans and planes

Other resources, Sampling Bird Cloaca or Results Birds and Influenza from Asia into Alaska with map

The show’s website is atrocious, too much flash and no information– here’s the entirety.

Aug 28, 9:00 pm, Discovery Channel (60 minutes)

Dirty Jobs: Wild Goose Chase

Mike Rowe goes on a wild goose chase literally! After traveling to the tundra, Mike joins forces with a team of workers that round up a flock of wild geese with airplanes.

http://dsc.discovery.com/tv-schedules/series.html?paid=1.13949.25321.4062.53

REVISED–location of Chevak from Alaska DCED
here’s the locator map for Chevak, courtesy of the Alaska DCED/DCRA department (see sidebar. For more info on the Village of Chevak, go to the database of Alaska communities).
additional resources for Chevak area (or use the site search tags below)
http://www.alaskool.org/projects/chevak/chevak/LessonI.html
See additional resources in the comments.

Another map of this year’s sampling locations is here, but the colors and size are too indistinct. It gives better idea of the local relief, however. I don’t know which goose was on world-wide TV.

Add this to Bookmarks:

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Researcher in the Unorganized Borough

This is an interesting doctoral study by someone who is now in Bethel teaching at the Kuskokwim Campus. He is a most welcome addition to the region’s knowledge bank.

This first section is from the ever useful EurekaAlert.org which is available by RSS feed or email from the American Association for the Advancement of Science AAAS

Earlier news reports are cited below that.

Researcher finds amorous avian anointment protects mates

University of Alaska Fairbanks researcher Hector Douglas has found that, for crested auklets, chemistry has both amorous and practical applications. The birds rub a citrus-like scent, secreted in wick-like feathers on their backs, on each other during courtship, a behavior called alloanointing.

8/19/2007 08:00 PM

Public release date: 20-Aug-2007 University of Alaska Fairbanks
Researcher finds amorous avian anointment protects mates

Fairbanks, Alaska- Hitting it off with members of the opposite sex takes chemistry.

University of Alaska Fairbanks researcher Hector Douglas has found that, for crested auklets, chemistry has both amorous and practical applications. The birds rub a citrus-like scent, secreted in wick-like feathers on their backs, on each other during courtship, a behavior called alloanointing. It is well known among some mammals, such as peccaries, but until now was not documented among birds. His research also indicates that the behavior could help protect the birds from parasites, such as ticks.

“During courtship the male solicits the female by adopting a horizontal posture and giving a soft choking call,” explained Douglas, an assistant professor of biology at UAF’s Kuskokwim Campus. “She rubs her bill and upper body over his wick feathers. Then she offers her wick feathers to the male, and they reciprocate several times, smearing the chemicals over their heads, necks and upper bodies.”

Douglas’ findings are published in the German journal Naturwissenschaften, a monthly publication of advances in natural sciences, medicine and technology.

Crested auklets are small black and gray seabirds that nest in huge colonies on remote island cliffs in Alaska and Siberia. They have bright orange bills, white facial plumes and a showy feather crest protruding from their foreheads. Douglas observed the unique mating ritual while conducting experiments with lifelike models of crested auklets on St. Lawrence Island, a remote outpost in the northern Bering Sea just 38 miles from Siberia. Douglas concealed chemical dispensers in blocks of construction foam that he painted to resemble rocks. Then he placed the decoys and models on the blocks.

“The crested auklets searched for the scent with their heads down in a conspicuous sniffing behavior,” Douglas said. “They honed in on the scent, rotating their heads to place their nostrils directly over the dispenser. Then they rubbed their bills over the dispensers just as they would on the wick feathers of their partner. Next, the birds rubbed themselves on the lifelike models right in the area where the wick feathers are located.”

Douglas used a similar experiment with captive crested auklets at the Cincinnati Zoo to learn if the behavioral response is tuned to breeding.

“In two successive years the strongest response to the scent occurred during early courtship,” he said. “These combined studies support the idea that the birds communicate with the scent during courtship.”

But the ritual also seems to have a more pragmatic purpose.

“What you smell is what you get in terms of protection against ticks,” Douglas said. “The scent contains aldehydes, which repel ticks.”

Some auklets emit more of the scent than others, he said. Douglas thinks that the birds gain an advantage by anointing with mates that have more of the tick-repelling scent.

Douglas measured aldehyde concentrations in feathers and then measured the movement of ticks exposed to the various concentrations.

“The ticks exposed to average amounts of citrus scent moved much slower than the controls. They were sluggish, they staggered, and some appeared to be paralyzed,” Douglas said. “When the dose was cut in half, the ticks were not as strongly affected. This suggests that the average auklet has adequate defenses, but choose a partner that is below average and that bird will not be as well protected.”

Birds cannot self-preen their heads and necks, which leaves them vulnerable to ticks in those areas, he said. “When crested auklets anoint their mates, they spread these chemical defenses over these hard-to-reach places, helping protect them against ticks.” Many animals use scents in social interactions and Douglas said his study extends scientific knowledge regarding these behaviors.

“Alloanointing in vertebrate animals has been understood primarily as a type of social interaction that conveys messages pertaining to individual recognition and the like,” said Douglas. “In this case we see that the social cue transmitted in scent can also be adaptive for defending against parasites.”

ON THE WEB: http://www.springerlink.com/content/3746368615283j8r/fulltext.pdf

Previous news story–

Alaska Science Forum August 4, 2005 Alaska seabird makes its own bug spray Article #1762 by Ned Rozell

Anchorage Daily News (Published: August 7, 2005)
http://www.adn.com/news/alaska/story/6791746p-6681183c.html
Western Alaska bird repels mosquitoes, ticks naturally
STUDY: Species of auklet with citrus smell escapes pest problems.

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Which wild birds are most susceptible to H5N1?

Orange over at the Coming Bird Flu Pandemic? (see sidebar) points this out July 6 Flu Update

ProMed has an excellent study of which wild birds are most susceptible to H5N1.

Based on our results, mute swans, cackling geese, and bar-headed geese were identified as waterfowl species that pose the greatest susceptibility to lethal infection and some species shed virus for up to 4 days before becoming ill. Such findings suggest some waterfowl species could spread H5N1 HPAI virus between limited geographic regions, but results do not suggest that these species would be long-term reservoirs for this virus.

Add this to Bookmarks:

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