There鈥檚 not much female birds won鈥檛 do to protect their young. Take the hornbill that routinely into a mud-and-poop fortress with her clutch, or the Killdeer that feigns a broken wing to distract predators. Yellow-legged Gulls, however, take an especially proactive approach: These seabirds to defend themselves against predators鈥攂efore they even emerge from the egg.
That鈥檚 what Judith Morales-Fernaz discovered on S谩lvora Island, off the coast of Spain, as she sought refuge from the sharp claws of angry gulls at the local lighthouse. 鈥淭hey start diving at you like missiles!鈥 the evolutionary ecologist says. Morales-Fernaz, who works for the Spanish National Research Council, camped with her research team on S谩lvora in 2017 to study whether mother gulls use 鈥渕aternal programming,鈥 a way to prepare offspring for living in a stressful environment.
Just before the egg-laying season, Morales-Fernaz and her team exposed some of the island鈥檚 gulls to decoys of minks, which are notorious predators on S谩lvora, and others to stuffed versions of non-threatening rabbits. The mink-exposed gulls performed a clear defensive response, she says, 鈥渨ith like 50 birds flying around the model and even trying to attack it.鈥 When chicks from both groups hatched weeks later, researchers played a recording of an adult alarm call. Of 118 young, those with mothers that had encountered the fake minks crouched three seconds faster than chicks whose mothers had lived peacefully with stuffed rabbits. 鈥淭he faster they do this, the higher their possibilities of survival,鈥 Morales-Fernaz says. The chicks with the quicker reflexes also laid down longer when placed on their backs鈥攁 classic predator-avoidance technique.
But intriguingly, only birds from the second egg laid in the clutch had the intuition to crouch fast and lay low. Morales-Fernaz thinks that by the time they produced the second egg, mother gulls had more experience with predators鈥攁nd thus higher levels of corticosterone, a kind of glucocorticoid stress hormone. While her study didn鈥檛 measure the hormone, which leaves a telltale presence in eggshells, there鈥檚 a vast from across the animal kingdom鈥攊ncluding from humans鈥攕howing a surge in glucocorticoid levels during stressful experiences. And that stress can be channeled to unborn babies.
"There鈥檚 a direct link between the mother, her environment, and what she transfers [to her offspring],鈥 says Oliver Love, an environmental and evolutionary physiologist at the University of Windsor in Canada. He鈥檚 seen the impacts firsthand in . 鈥淢others who have a hard time before they lay will transfer more hormones,鈥 he says.
While experts have long known that an excess of corticosterone , scientists are finding that the hormone can have an upside as well. For instance, in 2011, researchers at the University of Bern in Switzerland found that exposing female Great Tits to models of predatory Eurasian Sparrowhawks resulted in . Those chicks might be able to take off and escape faster, the team theorized. Similarly, Love noticed that injecting corticosterone into European Starling embryos led to chicks with . The doped-up young got the best marks in follow-up flight tests. But Morales-Fernaz鈥檚 study of Yellow-legged Gulls is the first proof of mother birds guiding anti-predator behavior (as opposed to anatomical traits) of chicks from the egg stage.
Seeing the subtle power of these maternal signals prompts new questions as well鈥攕uch as whether mothers might be able to prime offspring to cope with climate change. Warming oceans mean many seabirds already have to fly farther to find fish, and the quality of nesting habitats has declined. If stress cues can help babies react swiftly to a multitude of changes, they may better adapt to the ravages of an unpredictable environment. The more flexible chicks are, the better they may be able to keep up with the rate of climate change, Love says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 a hopeful thing to think about it.鈥
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