Have Nebraskan Swallows Evolved Shorter Wingspans To Avoid Becoming Roadkill?
Language
Reading Level
Listen to Article
A 2005 study by the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture Forest Service revealed that over 80 million birds are killed each year due to collisions with motor vehicles. However, one smart bird species that resides in some areas of the Midwestern United States like Nebraska, seems to be bucking the trend and if two researchers are to be believed, it is all to do with evolution.
The 30-year study led by University Of Tulsa's Charles Brown and his wife Mary Bomberger Brown, involved observing Cliff Swallows that reside in colonies under highway bridges, overpasses and road culverts. Like many animals that lack teeth, they are constantly on the roads picking up tiny bits of gravel that they swallow. These cement bits act like teeth inside their gizzard and assist in breaking down and digesting hard foods like seeds.
This together with the fact that they are aerial feeders who pursue their insect preys at speeds exceeding 20-25mph, often puts them right in the line of the ongoing car traffic that usually results in their deaths.
When the researchers began their study in 1982, about 20 Swallows perished annually from car collisions. By 2012, the numbers had been reduced to between just 2-4. Deducing that there was something more than luck involved, they began investigating other factors.
One of the things they measured was the wingspan of the birds had been killed over the years, the carcasses of which had fortunately been preserved. What they noticed was that over the years, the average wing length of most Swallows has been reduced from 110 mm (4.3 inches) to 103 or 104 mm (4.1 inches). What they also observed is that the ones that still sported longer wingspans became easier victims, possibly because they took longer to take off and gain altitude when confronted by the incoming car traffic.
The researchers who published the results of the study in the March 18th issue of Current Biology believe that while some Swallows still have longer wingspans making them susceptible to urban traffic, most have evolved, which is the reason they are thriving in a habitat where traffic patterns can only get worse.
Resources: usatoday.com,latimes.com, gizmag.com
Cite Article
Learn Keywords in this Article
164 Comments
- ZOZMOover 11 yearsgood they are smart
- bobover 11 yearsthat so cool!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
- Neatover 11 yearsIf it gets bad maybe they'll evolve even better ways of detecting and escaping cars? It's neat that that the average man has been able to guide a species evolution but it's to bad that they had to in the first place :/
- lukeclubalmost 10 yearsThis isn't exactly 'evolution', rather something called microevolution, which is "evolution within the species"
- xxleopardxxover 11 yearswow, those poor birds...at least they are smart enough to evolve
- Slendermanover 11 yearsThese birds are watching me...........
- raphael j.over 11 yearsbirds are cool, I want to study them some day!!!
- blakellllllljreover 11 yearslook at that nest!!!
- Supaover 11 yearsCool! Wonder how they did that?
- susieover 11 yearsnow there's less roadkill! :D
- claire over 11 yearsso sad