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Bell Miners (bell + miner)
Selected AbstractsBand-related leg injuries in an Australian passerine and their possible causesJOURNAL OF FIELD ORNITHOLOGY, Issue 2 2006Kate Splittgerber ABSTRACT We examined the extent and causes of band-related leg injuries in an Australian passerine, the Bell Miner (Manorina melanophrys). Eight percent of banded birds exhibited leg injuries, and most were birds with two plastic color bands on a tarsus. Leg injuries typically followed the accumulation of shed tarsal scales under the color bands. Color bands used on Bell Miners were tighter on the tarsus than the metal band and also tighter than the color bands used on Superb Fairy-wrens (Malurus cyaneus), a commonly banded species with no reported leg injuries. The tendency for scales to accumulate under two plastic color bands appeared to be influenced by the diameter of a band relative to the size of a bird's tarsus (with looser bands less likely to cause accumulation) and the material used to make the band (with smoother surfaces less likely to cause accumulation). Celluloid color bands had rougher internal surfaces than either Darvic or metal bands. In addition, both celluloid and Darvic color bands generated static electricity capable of attracting tarsal scales. Scales that accumulated under bands provided an environment where potentially harmful fungi became established, potentially contributing to the severity of leg injuries. Our results suggest that, when selecting an appropriate band size for a bird, the diameter of the tarsus at its midpoint should occupy only between 60% and 65% of the internal diameter of the band and, when possible, a single, bicolored, anodized aluminum alloy band should be used instead of multiple plastic color bands. SINOPSIS Examinamos la causa y la extensión de lesiones en las patas causadas por anillas en Manorina melanophrys, en Australia. Un 8% de las aves mostraron lesiones en las patas, la mayoría aves con dos anillas plásticas. Las lesiones causaron la acumulación de escamas tarsales mudadas, bajo la anilla. Se encontraron que las anillas plásticas ejercían mas presión o estaban más ajustadas que las anillas de metal y que estaban más apretadas que en Malurus cyaneus, una especie comúnmente anillada y en donde no encontramos lesiones. La tendencia de acumulación de escamas bajo las dos anillas plásticas, parece ser influenciada por el diámetro de la anilla, con respecto al grosor del tarso del ave y del material con que estuvo echo la anilla. Encontramos que las anillas de celuloide tienen una superficie interna más áspera que las anillas de metal. Además, ambos tipos de anillas, generan estática capaz de atraer las escama de la pata. Las partículas de escama que se acumulan bajo una anilla proveen de una buena base para que se crezcan hongos, que contribuyen a la gravedad de la lesión en la pata. Sugerimos que se deben seleccionar anillas apropiadas en tamaño en donde el diámetro del tarso en la parte media de la pata, ocupe entre el 60,65% del diámetro interno de la anilla. También, que cuando sea posible, se utilice una sola anilla de metal pintada con dos colores, en vez de dos anillas plásticas. [source] Non-lethal foraging by bell miners on a herbivorous insect: Potential implications for forest healthAUSTRAL ECOLOGY, Issue 4 2010KATHRYN M. HAYTHORPE Abstract Tree health is often negatively linked with the localized abundance of parasitic invertebrates. One group, the sap-sucking psyllid insects (Homoptera: Psyllidae) are well known for their negative impact upon vegetation, an impact that often culminates in the defoliation and even death of hosts. In Australia, psyllid-infested forest in poor health is also frequently occupied by a native honeyeater, the bell miner (Manorina melanophrys; Meliphagidae), so much so that the phenomenon has been dubbed ,bell miner-associated dieback' (BMAD). Bell miners are thought to be the causative agent behind BMAD, in part because the species may selectively forage only upon the outer covering (lerp) exuded by psyllid nymphs, leaving the insect underneath to continue parasitizing hosts. As bell miners also aggressively exclude all other avian psyllid predators from occupied areas, these behavioural traits may favour increases in psyllid populations. We examined bell miner foraging behaviour to determine if non-lethal foraging upon psyllid nymphs occurred more often than in a congener, the noisy miner (M. melanocephala; Meliphagidae). This was indeed the case, with bell miners significantly more likely to remove only the lerp covering during feeding, leaving the insect intact underneath. This arose from bell miners using their tongue to pry off the lerp cases, whereas noisy miners used their mandibles to snap at both the lerp and insect underneath. Furthermore, psyllids left behind following a bell miner foraging event were significantly more likely to be viable and regrow a lerp covering than those exposed by noisy miners. Together, this behaviour supports the theory that non-lethal foraging behaviour of bell miners may contribute to high psyllid abundance, consistent with the mechanisms by which BMAD is thought to develop. [source] |