| Literature DB >> 28993703 |
Barbara A Caspers1, Julie C Hagelin2, Madeleine Paul3, Sandra Bock3, Sandra Willeke3, E Tobias Krause4.
Abstract
Mechanisms underlying parent-offspring recognition in birds have fascinated researchers for centuries. Yet, the possibility that chicks recognise parental odour at hatching has been completely overlooked, despite the fact that olfaction is one of the first sensory modalities to develop, and social chemosignals occur in avian taxa. Here we show that Zebra Finch chicks (Taeniopygia guttata) are capable of identifying parental odours at hatching. In our first experiment, chicks begged significantly longer in response to the odour of their genetic mother or father compared to the odour of a non-relative of the same sex and reproductive status. In a second experiment, we cross-fostered eggs and tested the response of hatchlings to the scent of genetic vs. foster parents. Chicks from cross-fostered eggs responded significantly more to the odour of their genetic mother than their foster mother, but exhibited no difference in response to genetic vs. foster fathers. This is the first evidence that embryonic altricial birds are capable of acquiring chemosensory knowledge of their parents during early development, and retain chemical familiarity with their genetic mother despite egg cross-fostering. Furthermore our data reveals that kin recognition in birds can develop without any association with a genetic parent at hatching.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28993703 PMCID: PMC5634463 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-13110-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Day-old Zebra Finch chick in its nest, showing stereotypical begging behaviour. The eyes remain closed until about seven days old.
Figure 2Begging duration (s) of newly hatched chicks in response to two pairs of odour stimuli. Each pair of odors was included the genetic parent and an unrelated adult of the same age and reproductive status tested in randomised order. (a) In Experiment 1 (control conditions) chicks revealed a capacity for parent odour recognition by begging significantly longer toward the scent of their genetic mother or father, compared to odor of an unrelated adult. (b) In Experiment 2, eggs were experimentally cross-fostered. Foster chicks begged significantly longer in response to the odour of their genetic mothers only, indicating they retained chemosensory knowledge of maternal odour. No such pattern was evident for tests of odor from genetic or foster fathers. Data represent mean + S.E.M. Sample size in each bar represents chicks that exhibited at least one begging response during a two-odour test sequence.
Results of LME (Linear Mixed Models) analysis of Zebra Finch begging duration for chicks exposed to natural conditions at a natal nest (Experiment 1) and eggs cross-fostered into nests of non-relatives (Experiment 2).
| Factor | df1 | F | p-value |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Stimulus odour (genetic parent vs. unfamiliar adult) | 1,36 | 32.63 | < |
| Test type (adult female or adult male odour) | 1,19 | 5.88 |
|
| Stimulus odour * Test type | 1,36 | 0.14 | 0.71 |
|
| |||
| Stimulus odour (unfamiliar genetic parent vs. foster parent) | 1,24 | 13.02 |
|
| Test type (adult female or adult male odour) | 1,3 | 2.15 | 0.24 |
| Times eggs remained in genetic nest | 1,3 | 2.09 | 0.24 |
| Stimulus odour * Test type | 1,24 | 10.09 |
|
| Stimulus odour * Duration in genetic nest | 1,24 | 0.52 | 0.48 |
| Test type * Duration in genetic nest | 1,3 | 0.77 | 0.44 |