| Literature DB >> 27231646 |
Jennifer M Arnold1, Donald J Tyerman2, Doug Crump3, Kim L Williams3, Stephen A Oswald1.
Abstract
In July 2014, we observed premature feather loss (PFL) among non-sibling, common tern Sterna hirundo chicks between two and four weeks of age at Gull Island in northern Lake Ontario, Canada. Rarely observed in wild birds, to our knowledge PFL has not been recorded in terns since 1974, despite the subsequent banding of hundreds of thousands of tern chicks across North America alone. The prevalence, 5% of chicks (9/167), and extent of feather loss we report is more extreme than in previous reports for common terns but was not accompanied by other aberrant developmental or physical deformities. Complete feather loss from all body areas (wing, tail, head and body) occurred over a period of a few days but all affected chicks appeared vigorous and quickly began to grow replacement feathers. All but one chick (recovered dead and submitted for post-mortem) most likely fledged 10-20 days after normal fledging age. We found no evidence of feather dystrophy or concurrent developmental abnormalities unusual among affected chicks. Thus, the PFL we observed among common terns in 2014 was largely of unknown origin. There was striking temporal association between the onset of PFL and persistent strong southwesterly winds that caused extensive mixing of near-shore surface water with cool, deep lake waters. One hypothesis is that PFL may have been caused by unidentified pathogens or toxins welling up from these deep waters along the shoreline but current data are insufficient to test this. PFL was not observed among common terns at Gull Island in 2015, although we did observe similar feather loss in a herring gull Larus argentatus chick in that year. Comparison with sporadic records of PFL in other seabirds suggests that PFL may be a rare, but non-specific, response to a range of potential stressors. PFL is now known for gulls, penguins and terns.Entities:
Keywords: Algal toxins; Avian virus; Contaminants; Feather loss; Great Lakes; Induced moult; Nutritional stress; Pathogens; Premature moult
Year: 2016 PMID: 27231646 PMCID: PMC4878365 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.1959
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Reports of premature feather loss in wild populations of waterbirds.
In all reports, feather-loss in some individuals studied was extensive.
| Species | Location | Years | Explanation | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Common tern ( | Long Island, NY | 1970–1974 | Proposed link to contaminants (e.g., PCBs, mercury) | |
| Sooty tern ( | Seychelles | 1973 | Tick-borne soldado-virus | |
| Greater Black-backed gull ( | Witless Bay, Newfoundland | 1984 | Unknown cause | |
| Herring gull ( | Witless Bay, Newfoundland | 1984 | Unknown cause | |
| African penguin ( | South Africa | 1989 | Malnutrition | |
| Emperor penguin ( | Cape Washington, Antarctica | mid-1990s | Unknown cause | Reported in |
| Magellanic penguin ( | Argentina | 2007–2008 | Unknown cause | |
| African penguin ( | South Africa | 2008 | Unknown cause | |
| Adelie penguin ( | Cape Crozier, Antarctica | 2011 | Unknown cause | Reported in |
| Common tern ( | Gull Island, Lake Ontario | 2014 | Unknown cause, possible link to environmental conditions | This study |
| Adelie penguin ( | Ross Is. & Antarctic Peninsula | 2011–2015 | Proposed avian virus (polyomavirus, novel astrovirus) | |
| Herring gull ( | Gull Island, Lake Ontario | 2015 | Unknown cause | J Arnold & S Oswald (2015, unpubl. obs.) |
Figure 1Plumage characteristics resulting from of premature feather loss (PFL) in common tern chicks at Gull Island in 2014 (A, C, E) versus normal development (B, D, F; overhead photo in B is taken from the Common Tern Aging Guide: Wails, Oswald & Arnold, 2014).
In each case, whole body (A, B), wing (C, D) and tail (E, F) are shown (pictures taken between 9 and 18 July). Chicks shown are between 21 and 27 d of age (fledging usually occurs between 21 and 29 days; Nisbet, 2002).
Figure 2Growth in mass of the eight chicks exhibiting premature feather loss [PFL] (black lines = 95% confidence intervals) superimposed over the range of mass development for normal chicks in 2014 (n = 159 chicks, grey shading = area between 95% confidence intervals).
For PFL chicks measured later in development (>30 d of age), when fewer measurements were available, individual data points are plotted.
Figure 3Changes in mean daily weather conditions relative to hatching and exhibiting premature feather loss.
Changes in mean daily weather conditions, (A) near-shore lake surface temperature, (B) air temperature, (C) wind speed, and (D) wind direction (maximum gust), and correspondence with distribution of hatching dates (blue boxplots and outlier) and dates of first exhibiting premature feather loss [PFL] (green boxplots and outlier). Trend lines are 7-day running average of the weather variable. Grey shading highlights the period of plummeting near-shore surface water temperatures (2–10 July).