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Darwin's finches treat their feathers with a natural repellent

  • Arno Cimadom
  • , Charlotte Causton
  • , Dong H. Cha
  • , David Damiens
  • , Birgit Fessl
  • , Rebecca Hood-Nowotny
  • , Piedad Lincango
  • , Alejandro E. Mieles
  • , Erwin Nemeth
  • , Elizabeth M. Semler
  • , Stephen A. Teale
  • , Sabine Tebbich
  • University of Vienna
  • Charles Darwin Foundation
  • SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry
  • International Atomic Energy Agency
  • Austrian Institute of Technology
  • BirdLife Austria

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

35 Scopus citations

Abstract

Darwin's finches are highly innovative. Recently we recorded for the first time a behavioural innovation in Darwin's finches outside the foraging context: individuals of four species rubbed leaves of the endemic tree Psidium galapageium on their feathers. We hypothesised that this behaviour serves to repel ectoparasites and tested the repellency of P. galapageium leaf extracts against parasites that negatively affect the fitness of Darwin's finches, namely mosquitoes and the invasive hematophagous fly Philornis downsi. Mosquitoes transmit pathogens which have recently been introduced by humans and the larvae of the fly suck blood from nestlings and incubating females. Our experimental evidence demonstrates that P. galapageium leaf extracts repel both mosquitoes and adult P. downsi and also inhibit the growth of P. downsi larvae. It is therefore possible that finches use this plant to repel ectopoarasites.

Original languageEnglish
Article number34559
JournalScientific Reports
Volume6
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 10 2016

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