Bird Feeders Might Be Changing Bird Beaks (axios.com) 116
An anonymous reader shares a report: Bird beaks might be evolving to better fit bird feeders. A study of great tits in the UK, where feeders are common, found the bird's beaks have grown over the last 26 years, that British birds had longer beaks than those in the Netherlands, and that birds with genes for longer beaks were more likely to visit feeders, per Science News. Scientists have known that environmental changes, like El Nino, can influence the evolution of animals. Now, it appears something as simple as bird feeders can do the same. The scientists looked at the beaks of 2,322 great tits from the UK and the Netherlands, and also examined their genes. They tagged birds with gene variants for short and long beaks and tracked their feeding habits. What they found: The British birds had longer beaks and were more likely to have genes associated with beak length.
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
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Andy Richter was even more confused [twitter.com]
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"The only reason to attract birds is to feed cats."
Naw, also people without cats looove great tits.
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No no, I've found the squirrels love 'em even more than the birds or cats.
That's evolution (Score:5, Informative)
This is exactly how evolution is expected to work and originally documented by Darwin' study of Galapagos Finches.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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"But, there is absolutely no evidence of common descent in creatures."
Apart from reversions, atrophied aspects, nonfunctional vestiges and DNA. But apart from all THAT data, we don't have any evidence of common descent in creatures.
Hmmm? What? Morphology and fossil records? Oh shut up.
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Don't like Hillary? Vote for her good buddy, the Hollywood elite maybe billionaire because he's different.
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"a study of great tits in the UK" (Score:2, Funny)
u wot m8
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But, you also need to look at their jeans...er' genes.
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Obviously this study was conducted in the below-the-fold part of Daily Mail Online.
Great research position (Score:4, Funny)
I can imagine that conversation....
"So, you're a field researcher? What do you study?"
"Great tits!"
"Ah, you're an ornithologist?"
"What? Oh, uh... yeah, sure..."
=Smidge=
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"So, you're a field researcher? What do you study?"
"Great tits!"
. . . so don't worry about this thread getting labeled "Godwined" . . . with statements like those above, this thread has officiously been labeled "Weinsteined" . . .
Re:Great research position (Score:5, Funny)
I can imagine that conversation....
"So, you're a field researcher? What do you study?"
"Great tits!"
"Ah, you're an ornithologist?"
"No, I study birds in the UK..."
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...and for the foreigners who don't get that comment...
"They call us birds... we pick up worms"
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I can imagine that conversation....
"So, you're a field researcher? What do you study?"
"Great tits!"
"Ah, you're an ornithologist?"
"What? Oh, uh... yeah, sure..."
=Smidge=
I have ehmm... found that the more I have studied great tits, the longer the uhm.. beak has grown.
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I can imagine that conversation....
"So, you're a field researcher? What do you study?"
"Great tits!"
"Ah, you're an ornithologist?"
"No... I'm Harvey Weinstein, you insensitive clod."
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The left-wing dogpile on Weinstein is funny yet sad. So many people desperately trying to shit on him the hardest. And yeah, Weinstein is a total douche, make no mistake, but everyone excoriating him knew what he was doing. He got away with it for decades, and it was an open secret. They refused to believe the actresses he assaulted because he was very successful, had a lot of influence, and he knew the right people. It's like the bar owner from Casablanca who protested "I'm shocked, SHOCKED to find gamblin
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There's already been two above your comment.
Disappointed (Score:2)
First they grab my attention...
2,322 great tits from the UK and the Netherlands
and then they show me some birds? Is the internet broken today? ;)
Re: Disappointed (Score:2)
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That's 1161 great women.
Do not wver feed any wild animals (Score:1)
Please
Re:Do not ever feed any wild animals (Score:3, Interesting)
This is a moral dilemma, and there are strong arguments both ways, but I lean towards feeding them for a number of reasons for this. Firstly, human activity is having a very negative impact on bird populations, and populations are declining rapidly. It seems morally correct to compensate for the damage by help the animals, and feeding them to maintain their population is one way of doing that.
Feeding does seem to have a beneficial effect. For example if we look at tits, a family of birds that are very ad
Re: Do not ever feed any wild animals (Score:2)
We are part of nature.
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There are ground feeders for birds that like to scratch and forage. They're usually platforms a few inches off the ground. [duncraft.com]
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They're not truly wild. They live in the managed ecosystems of our towns and villages.
Whilst feeding animal in the true wild is bad, feeding back garden birds that would otherwise fail to find sufficient food in bird-unfriendly gardens (lacking the correct plants and enough prey) is necessary to prevent further decline.
For example:
"House sparrow numbers were not monitored adequately before the mid-1970s. Since then, numbers in rural England have nearly halved while numbers in towns and cities have declined
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They're not truly wild. They live in the managed ecosystems of our towns and villages.
Whilst feeding animal in the true wild is bad, feeding back garden birds that would otherwise fail to find sufficient food in bird-unfriendly gardens (lacking the correct plants and enough prey) is necessary to prevent further decline.
We feed a number of species in our back yard. Aside from educational and entertainment value, it is nice to be of some help to some of the birds. We now have a couple families of pileated woodpeckers along with downy, hairy and redheaded peckers, lots of goldfinches, cardinals, grosbeaks. and wood thrushes, winter wrens, as well as bluejays. Sparrows and we have some Cooper Hawks, one who seems to really like my wife.Those are just the regulars.
"House sparrow numbers were not monitored adequately before the mid-1970s. Since then, numbers in rural England have nearly halved while numbers in towns and cities have declined by 60 per cent.
I wonder if the numbers have declined in part because of increa
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Any great tits in your backyard?
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Any great tits in your backyard?
Occasionally. Especially when we have the hot tub going.
Unfamiliar with that bird... (Score:5, Funny)
I've not heard of that bird species before. No worries. Google to the rescue!
Let's see here...
images.google.com
Search for... "Great tit" ...
Well, guess I should have seen that one coming.
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I've not heard of that bird species before. No worries. Google to the rescue!
Let's see here...
images.google.com
Search for... "Great tit" ...
Well, guess I should have seen that one coming.
Have you actually tried? Even with "Safe Search" turned off, you get oodles of pages of birds before anything else.
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Have you actually tried? Even with "Safe Search" turned off, you get oodles of pages of birds before anything else.
This statement is true no matter which way it goes, once you remember that "bird" is also slang for "chick".
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Found it. Filed under Tits 'n Ass [postimg.org]
No shit, Sherlock! I am shocked! (Score:1)
What they found: The British birds had longer beaks and were more likely to have genes associated with beak length.
How on earth you could connect longer beaks with genes for beak length, Mr Holmes!
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How on earth you could connect longer beaks with genes for beak length, Mr Holmes!
Every bird had genes for beak length. Some have genes for short beaks, some have genes for long beaks.
What appears to be missing is any information that would exclude natural causes for longer beaks in the UK and shorter in The Netherlands. It is almost certain that there are many times as many birds in both places who eat from "the wild" and not from "bird feeders", so the evolutionary pressure to develop longer beaks may have nothing at all to do with feeders to begin with.
What's most interesting (Score:1)
It seems we have a propensity, as a species, to name bird species after cleavage.
In the Galapagos you have several species of Boobies.
Meanwhile, in the UK, you actually have a bird called "great tits"... This is rather creepy to be honest.
I think the ornithologists need to get out more, but I'm not sure if that would help.
The awkward conversation:
"I think that bird looks like a woman's breast, I shall call it Great Tits!"
"Have you ever seen a woman's breast?"
"No, but I would expect it to look like a bird."
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That's nothing. In New Zealand I saw black shags.
Re:What's most interesting (Score:5, Informative)
It seems we have a propensity, as a species, to name bird species after cleavage.
In the Galapagos you have several species of Boobies.
Meanwhile, in the UK, you actually have a bird called "great tits"... This is rather creepy to be honest.
"tit" (slang) dates from the 1920s, though "titty" comes from the 1700s. But the use of the word "tit" to mean "anything small" comes from the 1500s or earlier. So tits were just small birds, and tits didn't become boobs until recently-ish.
Re:What's most interesting (Score:5, Funny)
... tits were just small birds ...
Huh, the titmouse is actually a bird.
Yeah, and they're quite perky. We have them living around here in Kelseyville, CA. They are extremely adorable little peckers. They have almost as much personality as the hummingbirds, though they're not as bold (what is?)
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>Back in the 1980s they used "tits" and "jugs".
And melons, cantaloupes, honkers, hooters, fun-bags, ta-tas, boobs, knockers, headlights, bumpers, air bags, lungs, sweater pillows, twins, a rack... apparently guys really like breasts because we have a LOT of names for them.
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"tit" (slang) dates from the 1920s, though "titty" comes from the 1700s. But the use of the word "tit" to mean "anything small" comes from the 1500s or earlier. So tits were just small birds, and tits didn't become boobs until recently-ish.
The word you're looking for is "teat". Its origins date back to the 12th century [merriam-webster.com]
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just selective breeding/survival and not really evolution
Ah, that made my day. Slashdot never fails to deliver.
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How can they evolve so quickly?
No one should be surprised that beak shape can change so quickly. Even if you want to call it "evolution" or whatever the so-called "scientists" call it, changing beak shape can't possibly take millions of years because the Earth is only 6,000 years old.
study (Score:1)
"A study of great tits in the UK"
Tee hee
I can see it now (Score:4, Funny)
Lady: "How interesting! What are you studying?"
Researcher: "Great Tits."
Lady: "Um, thanks, but my eyes are up here!"
weak tea evolution (Score:2)
Shifting of the population expression rate of genes already present in the gene pool is such weak tea, I practically have to screen for homeopathy dilution when I read a story submission like this one.
An actual evolution product worth talking about is the capacity of a population to rapidly shift composition to match local conditions.
Ideally, the number of short beaks would remain compatible with the food best exacted with short beaks, while the number of long beaks increases to optimally extract the newly
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s/homologous/homozygous
Not an everyday typo. My fingers betray me in ever more clever ways.
About half of my typing errors are full word substitutions which preserve 80% of the desired keystrokes, though not usually involving words this abstract.
That's not evolution (Score:1)
Great tits acquire taste for bats (Score:2)
Great tits acquire taste for bats. Did the beaks change for them? http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/8245165.stm [bbc.co.uk]
Great Gig! (Score:2)
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