Department of Evolutionary Ecology, Estación Biológica de Doñana (CSIC), Avenida Americo Vespucio s/n, 41092, Seville, Spain.
Department of Biology and Burke Museum, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, 98195, U.S.A.
Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2017 May;92(2):1113-1127. doi: 10.1111/brv.12273. Epub 2016 Apr 8.
Fault bars are narrow malformations in feathers oriented almost perpendicular to the rachis where the feather vein and even the rachis may break. Breaks in the barbs and barbules result in small pieces of the feather vein being lost, while breaks in the rachis result in loss of the distal portion of the feather. Here, we provide a comprehensive review of 74 papers on fault bar formation in hopes of providing a clearer approach to their study. First, we review the evidence that the propensity to develop fault bars is modified by natural selection. Given that fault bars persist in the face of survival costs, we conclude that they must be an unfortunate consequence of some alternative adaptation that outweighs the fitness costs of fault bars. Second, we summarize evidence that the development of fault bars is triggered by psychological stress such as that of handling or predation attempts, and that they persist because the sudden contractions of the muscles in the feather follicle that control fright moults also causes the development of fault bars in growing feathers. Third, we review external and physiological (e.g. corticosterone) agents that may affect the likelihood that an acute stress will result in a growing feather exhibiting a fault bar. These modifying factors have often been treated as fundamental causes in the earlier literature on fault bars. Fourth, we then use this classification to propose a tentative model where fault bars of different severity (from light to severe) are the outcome of the interaction between the propensity to produce fault bars (which differs between species, individuals and feather follicles within individuals) and the intensity of the perturbation. This model helps to explain contradictory results in the literature, to identify gaps in our knowledge, and to suggest further studies. Lastly, we discuss ways in which better understanding of fault bars can inform us about other aspects of avian evolutionary ecology, such as the physiology of moult, the integration of moult into avian life cycles, and the strategies used to minimize stress during moult. Moreover, the study of fault bars may be relevant to understanding the aerodynamics of flight and the early evolution of flight.
羽枝缺陷是羽毛中的狭窄畸形,其方向几乎垂直于羽轴,羽脉甚至羽轴可能会在此处断裂。羽枝和羽小枝的断裂会导致羽脉的小块丢失,而羽轴的断裂则会导致羽毛的远端部分丢失。在这里,我们对 74 篇关于羽枝缺陷形成的论文进行了全面回顾,希望为研究提供更清晰的方法。首先,我们回顾了自然选择会改变羽枝缺陷形成倾向的证据。由于羽枝缺陷的存在是有生存成本的,我们得出结论,它们一定是某些替代适应的不幸后果,这种替代适应的好处超过了羽枝缺陷的适应成本。其次,我们总结了羽枝缺陷是由心理压力引发的证据,如处理或捕食尝试带来的压力,而且它们会持续存在,是因为控制惊吓换羽的羽毛滤泡中的肌肉突然收缩也会导致正在生长的羽毛中出现羽枝缺陷。第三,我们回顾了可能影响急性应激导致正在生长的羽毛出现羽枝缺陷的可能性的外部和生理因素(如皮质酮)。这些修饰因素在早期关于羽枝缺陷的文献中经常被视为根本原因。第四,然后我们使用这种分类方法提出了一个试探性模型,其中不同严重程度(从轻到重)的羽枝缺陷是产生羽枝缺陷的倾向(在物种、个体和个体内部的羽毛滤泡之间存在差异)与干扰强度之间相互作用的结果。该模型有助于解释文献中的矛盾结果,发现我们知识中的空白,并提出进一步的研究。最后,我们讨论了更好地理解羽枝缺陷可以如何为我们提供有关鸟类进化生态学其他方面的信息,例如换羽生理学、换羽纳入鸟类生命周期、以及在换羽期间最小化应激的策略。此外,羽枝缺陷的研究可能与理解飞行的空气动力学和飞行的早期进化有关。