Animal World

All Creatures Great and Small

Egg Spots And Stress Levels

New Scientist published a research at the University of Alcalá in Spain. To measure the health of a bird population without having to catch birds and run tests on them, the researchers said, just count the spots on their eggs. The spottier the egg, the more stressed the parent, the team has found.

The team photographed 112 blue tit (Cyanistes caeruleus) egg clutches in central Spain, weighed the parents and ran blood tests. They found that females that laid eggs with more spots weighed less and had higher cellular concentrations of a stress-related protein called HSP70 than females that laid less spotty eggs.

The team suggests that the eggshell pigment protoporphyrin is responsible for the correlation. Levels of the pigment chemical rise as stress levels increase in the female, which would explain the greater coloration in the eggshell when it is laid. Egg speckling could be a cue for male blue tits to work harder to feed underweight chicks. Alternatively, speckling may be a cue to abandon the nest and find a healthier female.

“This could be really useful, since almost all of the endangered Hawaiian birds we work with have spotted eggs,” says Alan Lieberman at San Diego Zoo in California.

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This entry was posted by Koen on Tuesday, May 22nd, 2007 at 1:20 pm and is filed under Birds. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.

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