Chin Stephanie Y, Hopkins William A, Cristol Daniel A
Institute for Integrative Bird Behavior Studies, Department of Biology, College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, VA, 23185, USA.
Department of Fish and Wildlife Conservation, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA, 24061, USA.
Ecotoxicology. 2017 Nov;26(9):1271-1283. doi: 10.1007/s10646-017-1852-x. Epub 2017 Oct 11.
Mercury is an environmental contaminant that impairs avian reproduction, but the behavioral and physiological mechanisms underlying this effect are poorly understood. The objective of this study was to determine whether lifetime dietary exposure to mercury (1.2 µg/g wet weight in food) impacted avian parental behaviors, and how this might influence reproductive success. To distinguish between the direct effects of mercury on parents and offspring, we created four treatment groups of captive-bred zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata), with control and mercury-exposed adults raising cross-fostered control or mercury-exposed eggs (from maternal transfer). Control parents were 23% more likely to fledge young than parents exposed to mercury, regardless of egg exposure. Mercury-exposed parents were less likely to initiate nests than controls and spent less time constructing them. Nests of mercury-exposed pairs were lighter, possibly due to an impaired ability to bring nest material into the nestbox. However, nest temperature, incubation behavior, and provisioning rate did not differ between parental treatments. Unexposed control eggs tended to have shorter incubation periods and higher hatching success than mercury-exposed eggs, but there was no effect of parental exposure on these parameters. We accidentally discovered that parent finches transfer some of their body burden of mercury to nestlings during feeding through secretion in the crop. These results suggest that, in mercury-exposed songbirds, pre-laying parental behaviors, combined with direct exposure of embryos to mercury, likely contribute to reduced reproductive success and should be considered in future studies. Further research is warranted in field settings, where parents are exposed to greater environmental challenges and subtle behavioral differences might have more serious consequences than were observed in captivity.
汞是一种环境污染物,会损害鸟类的繁殖能力,但这种影响背后的行为和生理机制却鲜为人知。本研究的目的是确定终生饮食接触汞(食物中湿重为1.2微克/克)是否会影响鸟类的亲代行为,以及这可能如何影响繁殖成功率。为了区分汞对亲代和子代的直接影响,我们创建了四个圈养繁殖的斑胸草雀(Taeniopygia guttata)处理组,对照组和接触汞的成年鸟养育交叉寄养的对照或接触汞的卵(来自母体转移)。无论卵的接触情况如何,对照亲代育雏成功的可能性比接触汞的亲代高23%。接触汞的亲代比对照组更不可能开始筑巢,并且花费在筑巢上的时间更少。接触汞的配对所筑的巢更轻,这可能是由于将巢材带入巢箱的能力受损。然而,亲代处理之间的巢温、孵化行为和育雏率没有差异。未接触汞的对照卵的孵化期往往较短,孵化成功率高于接触汞的卵,但亲代接触对这些参数没有影响。我们意外地发现,亲代草雀在喂食过程中通过嗉囊分泌将其体内的部分汞负担转移给雏鸟。这些结果表明,在接触汞的鸣禽中,产卵前的亲代行为,加上胚胎直接接触汞,可能导致繁殖成功率降低,未来的研究应予以考虑。在野外环境中进行进一步研究是有必要的,在野外环境中,亲代面临更大的环境挑战,细微的行为差异可能会产生比在圈养环境中观察到的更严重的后果。