GPS News  
Polluted Prey Causes Wild Birds To Change Their Tune

The scientists found that female starlings prefer the song of males exposed to the mixture of endocrine disrupting chemicals, suggesting the potential for population level effects on reproductive success.
by Staff Writers
Washington DC (SPX) Feb 27, 2008
Considerable attention has been paid to the effects of endocrine disrupting chemicals in aquatic environments, but rather less attention has been given to routes of contamination on land.

A new study, published in PLoS ONE on February 27 by researchers at Cardiff University, reveals that wild birds foraging on invertebrates contaminated with environmental pollutants, show marked changes in both brain and behaviour: male birds exposed to this pollution develop more complex songs, which are actually preferred by the females, even though these same males usually show reduced immune function compared to controls.

Katherine Buchanan and her colleagues studied male European starlings (Sturnus vulgaris) foraging at a sewage treatment works in the south-west UK and analysed the earthworms that constitute their prey. The researchers found that those birds exposed to environmentally-relevant levels of synthetic and natural estrogen mimics developed longer and more complex songs compared to males in a control group.

Specifically, birds dosed with the complete spectrum of endocrine disrupting chemicals found in the invertebrates spent longer singing, sang more often and produced more complex songs, a sexually selected trait important in attracting females for reproduction even though birds dosed at these ecologically relevant levels also showed reduced immune function.

The study also addresses the mechanism for this effect, as the researchers found that the high vocal centre (HVC), the area of the brain that controls male song complexity, is significantly enlarged in the contaminated birds. Estrogen causes masculinisation of the songbird brain and the HVC is enriched with estrogen receptors. Neural development is thus susceptible to exposure to chemicals which mimic estrogen, or to enhanced estrogen levels. The results also confirm the plasticity of the adult songbird brain.

Finally, the scientists found that female starlings prefer the song of males exposed to the mixture of endocrine disrupting chemicals, suggesting the potential for population level effects on reproductive success.

"This is the first evidence that environmental pollutants not only affect, but paradoxically enhance a signal of male quality such as song," said Katherine Buchanan, the corresponding author of the paper. "These results may have consequences of population dynamics of an already declining species."

Related Links
Public Library of Science
Our Polluted World and Cleaning It Up



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Polluting Chinese bosses face steep salary cuts: report
Beijing (AFP) Feb 26, 2008
Bosses of Chinese companies who pollute waterways could be docked half their salary, state media reported Tuesday, in the latest proposal to tackle the country's environmental problems.







  • Environmentalists climb on Heathrow jet in airport protest: officials
  • NASA opens a rotary wing research project
  • All-star line-up at first Singapore Airshow
  • Military Aircraft To Perform Aviation Safety Research

  • Lithium Technology Receives Order For Hybrid Bus Application
  • Hydrogen-fueled cars stuck at the gate
  • A Greener Way To Power Cars
  • Porsche takes on London mayor over road pricing scheme

  • Northrop Grumman And Harris Demonstrate Airborne Networking
  • EADS DS Delivers Army Command And Control Information System To Franco-German Brigade
  • Thompson Files: Electronic war blindness
  • Harris Provides American Forces Network With Broadcast System To Reach One Million Troops

  • Czech PM in US touts missile shield plan
  • Czech, Poland close to deal on US anti-missile shield: officials
  • Polish-US missile-shield talks on track: report
  • BMD Focus: Killing NROL-21 -- Part 1

  • 'Frozen garden of Eden' seed vault blooms in Arctic
  • Biodiversity 'doomsday vault' in numbers
  • Seed vault in Arctic is mankind's 'insurance policy': project leader
  • Food inflation hits Cambodia's poor, threatens hunger

  • Monitoring Asia-Pacific Disasters From Space
  • Philippine floods and landslides toll rises to 26: officials
  • Death toll from China snow storms hits 129: report
  • Kenya, UN warn crisis risks incubating new AIDS infections

  • Satellite Debris Analysis Indicates Hydrazine Tank Hit
  • Darkest material developed in lab
  • NASA And Northrop Grumman Partner To Measure The Immeasurable
  • US DoD Succeeds In Intercepting Non-Functioning Satellite

  • Killer Military Robots Pose Latest Threat To Humanity
  • Robot Plumbs Wisconsin Lake On Way To Antarctica, Jovian Moon
  • Can A Robot Draw A Map
  • Meet Blob The Robot

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement