鸟类的相对脑大小与避免车辆碰撞之间的关系是微妙的。

IF 1.4 3区 生物学 Q2 ZOOLOGY
Zoological Studies Pub Date : 2025-03-19 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.6620/ZS.2025.64-03
Robert M Zink, Brittaney L Buchanan
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引用次数: 0

摘要

Møller和Erritzøe(2017)报告说,与其他原因导致的鸟类相比,因车辆碰撞而死亡的鸟类的大脑平均相对较小,而其他原因尚未确定。尽管人们对评估脑质量的方法存在担忧,但在排除外来物种后,我们重新分析了Møller和Erritzøe(2017)发表的数据,并证实了被车辆碰撞致死的鸟类的大脑体积较小的微妙趋势。一些鸟类群体(猫头鹰、鹰、园鸟和候鸟)没有反映出总体结果。令人惊讶的是,没有年龄或性别的影响,而人们会认为没有经验的未成熟鸟类和处于繁殖状态的雌性鸟类是脆弱的。总的来说,死于车辆碰撞和其他原因的鸟类的大脑质量图有很大的重叠,在某些物种中,死于碰撞的个体的大脑相对更大。也就是说,被交通工具撞到的鸟类大脑相对较小的趋势并不是普遍存在的,也没有任何物种在这两类鸟类的大脑大小上存在绝对差异。有可能在短时间内,鸟类与移动的交通工具发生了互动,选择作用于大脑大小以避免碰撞,尽管我们认为稍微大一点的大脑可能代表了一种天生的倾向,即避免快速接近的物体。他们的研究中有一个有趣的问题是,没有被车辆撞到的鸟类死亡的原因是什么。雏鸟死亡的可能原因包括捕食(自然和家猫)和与窗户和其他人类建筑的碰撞。事实上,脑容量相对较大的鸟类可能更容易撞到窗户或被猫抓住(即其他死亡原因),因此,脑容量相对较大的鸟类似乎不会减轻这些死亡原因。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Relationship Between Relative Brain Size and Avoidance of Vehicular Collisions in Birds is Subtle.

Møller and Erritzøe (2017) reported that birds killed by collisions with vehicles had on average relatively smaller brains than birds killed by other causes, which were not identified. Despite concerns about the method used to assess brain mass, we reanalyzed the published data of Møller and Erritzøe (2017) after excluding extraneous species and confirmed a subtle tendency for birds killed by vehicular collision to have somewhat small brains. Some groups of birds (owls, hawks, garden birds and migratory species) did not reflect the overall result. Surprisingly there was no effect of age or sex, whereas one would expect inexperienced immature birds and females in breeding condition to be vulnerable. Overall, plots of brain mass in birds killed by vehicular collisions and other causes greatly overlap, and in some species, individuals killed by collisions have relatively larger brains. That is, the tendency for birds hit by vehicles to be relatively smaller brained is not universal, nor in any species is there an absolute difference in brain size between the two categories. It is possible that in the short time birds have interacted with moving vehicles that selection has acted on brain size to avoid collisions, although we suggest that slightly larger brains might represent an innate tendency to avoid rapidly approaching objects. An interesting question from their study is what was the cause of mortality in the birds not hit by vehicles. Likely sources of mortality of birds post-nestling stage include depredation (natural and house cats) and collisions with windows and other human structures. In fact, relatively large-brained birds might be more susceptible to collisions with windows or being caught by cats (i.e., the other sources of mortality), for which having a relatively larger brain would not appear to mitigate these sources of mortality.

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来源期刊
Zoological Studies
Zoological Studies 生物-动物学
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
6.20%
发文量
35
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Zoological Studies publishes original research papers in five major fields: Animal Behavior, Comparative Physiology, Evolution, Ecology, and Systematics and Biogeography. Manuscripts are welcome from around the world and must be written in English. When the manuscript concerns the use of animals or specimens in research, a statement must be included to the effect that the author(s) has adhered to the legal requirements of the country in which the work was carried out or to any institutional guidelines.
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