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Around a decade ago, Danielle Whittaker walked into her laboratory with a Brown-headed Cowbird in a brown paper bag. Whittaker is an evolutionary biologist at Michigan State University who studies the role of smell in bird behavior. She sometimes uses bags to keep captured birds calm while she brings them into the lab for banding and data collection before releasing them.
Cowbirds lay their eggs in other species' nests, saddling other parents with the child-rearing responsibilities. Whittaker had a hunch that maybe they pull off that trick by not having much of a smell to give them away.
Not the case.
鈥淎s soon as I opened the bag there was this scent, and it was very much like cookies,鈥 Whittaker says. 鈥淚 thought somebody had cookies in the room. I was shoving the bag in everyone鈥檚 face, like, 鈥楽mell this bird!鈥 Which, it turns out, not everyone enjoys.鈥
Until surprisingly recently, conventional wisdom held that birds have little or no sense of smell. But in the past several years, researchers have overturned that misguided assumption. They鈥檝e found that scents help some birds find food and avoid predators. And they鈥檝e learned that the odors birds themselves produce are useful in selecting mates, identifying relatives, and distinguishing their nests from countless others in a colony.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a whole new way of thinking about how birds perceive their world that has been basically ignored for centuries,鈥 says Julie Hagelin, a University of Alaska Fairbanks biologist who also studies smell鈥檚 role in bird behavior. 鈥淲e just don鈥檛 understand it yet, and that鈥檚 exciting.鈥
There are no doubt lots of discoveries waiting to be made in this emerging area of ornithology. This past fall, for example, Whittaker published a paper showing that bacteria in the preen glands of Dark-eyed Juncos in determining the birds鈥 scents. ( and not altogether pleasant, according to Whittaker. 鈥淚 sniff all my birds now,鈥 she says.)
One thing scientists in this young field have already learned: There are some wild smells out there. All birds likely have some odor鈥攁t least 177 avian species emit one that humans can detect, 鈥but these ones are particularly pungent.
碍腻办腻辫艒&苍产蝉辫;
Hagelin鈥檚 fascination with avian funk began with a fat, flightless, nocturnal parrot. She was a volunteer in New Zealand with the recovery program for the critically endangered K膩k膩p艒. One day that work involved holding one of the birds against her body while changing the battery in its tracking device. 鈥淭he scent of this bird鈥檚 plumage rubbed off on my T-shirt, and I smelled like K膩k膩p艒 all day,鈥 Hagelin says. She began wondering about what role that strong scent might play in the birds鈥 lives, and she鈥檚 been researching related questions ever since.
鈥淭heir feathers smell sort of sweet and musty,鈥 she says. The odor is strong enough that, some mornings, while walking a dewy trail, her nose would pick up lingering evidence that a K膩k膩p艒 had waddled along the same path before sunrise. 鈥淭o me it smells like a mix of lavender and honey and dust.鈥
Others have described the bird鈥檚 scent in similar terms. They鈥檙e like 鈥渕usty violin cases,鈥 one researcher . 鈥淪weetish and vegetative,鈥 researchers from New Zealand鈥檚 Massey University . And, as one of the Massey team noted in a 2012 paper, poet Sonja Yelich even wrote aroma, which she described as 鈥渟ome honey, papaya & the inside of an old clarinet case which is spitty.鈥
For millennia, K膩k膩p艒 could strut around smelling like whatever section of the orchestra they pleased; the birds evolved without any mammalian predators to pick up the scent. But their strong odor helped to make the birds easy targets for introduced rats, cats, and other mammals, which played a big part in slashing the K膩k膩p艒 population to just 51 individuals in 1995, when the latest intensive recovery program began. Today there are birds living on three predator-free islands.
Hoopoe
Pro tip: Do not threaten a Hoopoe nestling. When in danger, they鈥檒l squirt a stream of feces at an invader in self-defense.
That鈥檚 not the only source of stink from these distinctive birds of Africa and Eurasia. The preen gland is where birds produce the oil they rub on themselves to keep their feathers clean and waterproof. But come breeding season, something weird happens to the preen glands of female Hoopoes and their nestlings: They swell up and produce what as 鈥渁n evil-smelling fluid, with a stench like that of rotting meat.鈥
Scientists say this noisome goop likely serves to deter predators; Hagelin points out that decomposing flesh can contain dangerous microbes that some animals may avoid. The smelly fluid has another function that's been more firmly established: It contains beneficial bacteria which attack other bacteria that can eat away at feathers. Hoopoe moms-to-be also spread this stuff on their eggs, which helps seal small pits in the eggs to keep out microbial threats.
On top of that, Hoopoes are notorious for not cleaning out their nests, even though nestlings are known to plaster the walls in poop. No surprise, then, that a German insult is 鈥渟tinken wie ein Wiedehopf鈥濃攖o stink like a Hoopoe.
Crested Auklet
Some years after Hagelin washed the K膩k膩p艒 smell out of her clothes, she found herself on an inflatable research boat off the Alaska coast, where she was studying smell in Crested Auklets. A group of maybe 75 of the seabirds flew past, about 25 feet from the boat. That was close enough to get a big whiff. 鈥淚t smelled like someone was peeling a tangerine right next to me,鈥 Hagelin says.
As 爆料公社 magazine has somewhat saucily reported, Crested Auklets have 鈥wild and kinky mating rituals,鈥 and their distinctive smell plays a big part in their 鈥渞ambunctious sex parties.鈥 When a female auklet takes an interest in a male suitor, 鈥渟he buries her beak in the male鈥檚 neck feathers鈥攚here that fresh tangerine scent is strongest鈥攊n a move called a 鈥榬uff sniff.鈥欌
Hagelin says she鈥檚 heard from Alaska Natives in her study area that it鈥檚 common to smell a flock or colony of Crested Auklets before seeing them. The rocky islands and outcrops the birds inhabit are often shrouded in thick fog, so Hagelin suspects scent might be an especially important communication channel for them, to compensate for low visibility.
In any case, the odor they鈥檝e evolved could be a heck of a lot worse. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really pleasant,鈥 Hagelin says. 鈥淭here are plenty of other scents in seabird colonies that are not as appealing.鈥
Hoatzin
It鈥檚 fitting that Hoatzins smell funny, because everything about these Seussian weirdos is just a little bit strange. They nest above rivers and wetlands in the tropical lowland forests of South America, allowing their young to plop into the water below when in danger. The nestlings then climb a tree back to safety using bizarre that they lose as adults.
Hoatzins are pretty lousy at flying, so your first clue that there鈥檚 one nearby might be the sound of it flapping into bushes and branches. Another clue: a strong barnyard smell. Turns out, those two quirks are related. Hoatzins are weak flyers because they have an unusually small sternum, leaving little room for flight muscles attach to the skeleton. And that small sternum is designed to make space for an exceptionally large crop and esophagus, which, with help from gut bacteria, act as a fermentation chamber. They鈥檙e the only birds known to possess this odd digestive system, which helps them to break down tough and sometimes toxic plant matter, since their diet consists almost entirely of leaves. 鈥淗oatzins in effect are flying cows,鈥 the .
As in cattle, this 鈥渇oregut fermentation鈥 in Hoatzins produces methane, which they belch out, with an odor that鈥檚 been compared to that of cow manure. As a result, even dictionary editors鈥攅t tu, ?鈥攈ave dubbed this species the 鈥渟tinkbird.鈥