San Marcos Record, San Marcos, TX

Columns

July 25, 2010

Magpies blessed with big bird brains

— Each week hundreds of people call or visit the San Marcos Public Library to find information.  "Answers•To•Go" highlights recently received questions.  Please visit the library at 625 East Hopkins, call 393-8200 for information over the phone, or e-mail us through our webpage at www.ci.san-marcos.tx.us/library.htm.

 

Q. I’m not really a birdwatcher.  However, I’m often fascinated by birds that I don’t see in Texas when I’m traveling.  Last year, I saw eagles hunting on the coast at Washington’s Olympic National Park.  This year, it was magpies in Colorado.  Their black and white markings are nearly as dramatic as those of penguins and skunks.  I’d like to know more about magpies and their habits.

 

A. You’re in luck.  I’ve got just the book for you — Candace Savage’s “Bird Brains:  The Intelligence of Crows, Ravens, Magpies, and Jays.”

 This Sierra Club book is clearly a labor of love.  Savage balances a layman’s discussion of research with her big, beautiful photos of magpies and other members of the fascinating corvid family of birds.

 From “The Audubon Society Encyclopedia of North American Birds,” she cites ornithologist John K. Terres’ opinion that corvids have probably achieved the highest degree of intelligence to be found in any birds.

 Savage continues, “By the 1960s, neurologist Stanley Cobb discovered that the avian brain is built on its own unique plan.  Instead of relying on an elaborate cerebral cortex, birds have developed another part of the forebrain, the hyperstriatum (which mammals lack), as their chief organ of intelligence.

“The larger the hyperstriatum, the better birds fare on intelligence tests.  Crows, ravens, and magpies are all at the high end of the scale.  Corvids are also tops among birds for overall brain size.  (Their brain-to-body ratio equals that of dolphins and nearly matches our own.)”

Savage admires the magpie’s nest building skills: “A magpie nest is a major engineering feat — a structure composed of perhaps fifteen hundred sticks, cemented together with a layer of mud, and sometimes, cow dung.

“The container is then lined with fine roots and stems, supplemented with bark fibers, hair, and grass.  Arching over the whole structure, the birds construct a protective roof of twigs, often armed on the outermost surface with thorny branches.

“One or two openings in the sides let the magpies fly in and out of their fortress.  But nest predators, including owls and large crows, find it difficult to breach these defenses, and this is presumably why such elaborate constructions have evolved.”

 Savage then turns her attention to fledgling magpies:  “As ornithologist Konrad Lorenz and other observers have noted, fledglings often seem pathetically dependent on adult guidance.  Young magpies, a day or two out of the nest, go into a panic over a falling leaf yet fail to take cover when a hawk soars overhead.

 “Some of them pay a high price for their incompetence.  In one study, more than a fifth of magpie fledglings fell prey to owls, hawks, and falcons within two weeks of leaving the nest.

 “Biologist Deborah Buitron, who watched the goings-on at more than two dozen magpie nests in South Dakota, observed what she thought might be ‘anti-predator lessons.’

 “A whole family of magpies would take off after a coyote or a crow, harassing it with machine-gun blasts of loud, rattling calls.  The birds’ alarm calls varied with the degree of danger that the birds perceived.

 “If the magpies saw a falcon perched in a tree, they swooped at it with loud, long rattle calls; but if the predator took off—thus posing an immediate threat to its pursuers—the volume and intensity of the call increased to a siren-like wail of staccato shouts.”

 “Bird Brains” is just one fascinating, gorgeous example of the library’s books on wildlife for both adults and children.  Come on in and check some out!

 

Text Only
Columns
  • A Word About Recycling - Jan. 22, 2012

    Not-so-good news. Some of you may have seen an article on this, but we did not.

    January 22, 2012

  • Life's Like That - Jan. 22, 2012

    January 22, 2012

  • A Word About Recycling - Jan. 15, 2012

    A few items, concerning other countries, contained in a recent Resource Recycling eNewsletter we found interesting.

    January 15, 2012

  • Life's Like That - Jan. 15, 2012

    What will Heaven be like? This age-old question has been answered in many ways. Heaven has been made the butt of thousands of jokes. These usually begin with three people approaching those pearly gates and having a conversation with Peter, the apostle and holder of the keys to the blessed land.

    January 15, 2012

  • Life's Like That - Jan. 8, 2012

    A whole week has passed since the New Year began. Hold up your hand if you have already broken one or more of your resolutions. Okay. you can put your hands down now.

    January 8, 2012

  • A Word About Recycling - Jan. 8, 2012

    As we go forth in this new year, here's a couple of items from Resource Recycling pertaining to Texas towns...

    January 8, 2012

  • Life's Like That - Jan. 1, 2012

    As I began thinking about today’s essay I sensed a presence of the ghost of New Years past. I’m at the age of “if I make it ‘til …” So, if I make it ‘til Sunday I will have been around for 80 changes of the calendar.

    January 1, 2012

  • Life's Like That - Dec. 25, 2011

    Merry Christmas, Feliz Navidad, Geseende kersfees, Gezur Krislinjin, Bon Nadali un Bon Any Nou, Joyeux Noel these words ring out all around the world today …

    December 25, 2011

  • A Word About Recycling - Dec. 18, 2011

    With Christmas coming soon, one of the pictures we have in our minds of Santa is the one which Coca-Cola had early on in their ads. Thus this item in the Resource Recycling eNewsletter caught our eye,

    December 18, 2011

  • Life's Like That - Dec. 18, 2011

    Christmas time is a good time to give thought to the veteran next door, or he or she may be living in your house.

    December 18, 2011

House Ads
Business Marquee
AP Video
Whitney Houston Funeral to Be Invitation Only New Details in Search for Missing Utah Mom Raw Video: Protesters, Security Clash in Bahrain Obama: Good US-China Ties Help the Whole World School Pays Students to Attend Class Raw Video: Biden Greets Chinese VP for Visit Raw Video: Heavy Shelling in Homs, Syria Raw Video: 5 People Injured in Bangkok Blasts Raw Video: Kim Jong Il Statue Unveiled Trial Opens for Ala. Man in Bride's Diving Death Baltimore's 'Crime Stopper' Is a Basketball Star Raw Video: Hearse Arrives at N.J. Funeral Home Authorities: Houston Found Underwater in Tub Arm Wrestler Not Guilty Plea in Wife's Death Raw Video: Houston Body Flown From L.A. to N.J. First Person: Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show Obama's New Budget: The Winners and Losers Gregoire: Marriage Equality Is Right for Wash. Bacteria Keep Swimmers Off Some Fla. Beaches Sandusky Can See Grandkids, Have Local Jury
Community Calendar
Loading…
Events by eviesays.com
Twitter Updates
Follow me on Twitter
Facebook
Video
Seasonal Content