Clark L
Monell Chemical Senses Center, 3500 Market Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104-3308, USA.
Parasitol Today. 1990 Nov;6(11):358-60. doi: 10.1016/0169-4758(90)90415-z.
The avian nest protection hypothesis explains the widespread behavior of incorporating fresh green plant material into an otherwise dry nest matrix as an evolutionary adaptation. Species that exhibit this behavior tend to breed in previously inhabited nest sites and experience high ectoparasite and pathogen loads. Metabolites in the green plants control parasite and pathogen populations and decrease the effects of these agents on nestlings. The choice of plants is not arbitrary. In the case of European starlings, a nonrandom subset of available vegetation is selected, and it is these plants that have the largest impact on ectoparasite and pathogen populations. Experimental and observational evidence suggests that starlings select plants on the basis of chemosensory cues.
鸟巢保护假说解释了将新鲜绿色植物材料融入原本干燥的鸟巢基质这一广泛行为,认为这是一种进化适应。表现出这种行为的物种往往在先前有鸟类居住的巢穴地点繁殖,且遭受较高的体外寄生虫和病原体负荷。绿色植物中的代谢物可控制寄生虫和病原体数量,并减轻这些病原体对雏鸟的影响。植物的选择并非随意。以欧洲椋鸟为例,它们会从可用植被中选择一个非随机的子集,而正是这些植物对体外寄生虫和病原体数量产生最大影响。实验和观察证据表明,椋鸟是根据化学感应线索来选择植物的。