Back in the 1980s, it became popular for biologists to consider plant secondary compounds in understanding inter-species relationships and other ecological matters. I was doing my thesis research at the time, and it even affected what I was doing, as the wild world was being reconceptualized in terms of tannins and alkaloids, seed edators and dispersers, and so on.

I remember taking an advanced seminar in plant-animal interaction, in preparation for my own study of human-plant interactions. The first thing I learned was that most animal-plant interaction did not involve mammals, or even birds. Insects ruled. We spent most of the rest of the semester dealing with grasshoppers. At one point, for some reason, we had a debate. It was the heady, politically charged days of Roe v. Wade, and so we debated the issue of choice. The question was, did female plants choose which pollen would fertilize their ova, or were they merely raped by the patriarchal male plants? Luckily, I was chosen to be on the pro-choice side. We wore the appropriate buttons and hats and carried signs to the debate. Also, it turns out that we were scientifically correct; female plants exert considerable choice in whom they mate with, it turns out.

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European Starling in New York City trying to bum a cigarette (photo by Corey, from HERE)

But I digress. We should return to the issue of plant molecules and the good stuff they can do, vis-a-vis birds.

Plants have evolved to avoid being eaten by a variety of animals. One way to do that is to be toxic. Some of our greatest human pleasures come from those toxins, and I’m not just talking about various narcotics, though there is always that. Indeed, coffee, tea, and cigarettes all use, as their active ingredients, plant molecules that were originally “invented” by plants to ward off consumers. Aromatic spices are what they are because they are insecticides. Basil, Cilantro, Oregano, which most but not all humans love, are leaves loaded with lethal aromatic compounds, lethal mainly to invertebrates of one kind or another.

ResearchBlogging.orgSo, back in the 1980s, biologists looked into bird nesting behavior and seemingly showed that some birds put certain plants into their nests in order to reduce the parasite load they might otherwise suffer, especially in nesting sites that were repeatedly reused. Further studies over the next couple of decades found similar things with other birds, other plants, other contexts, so it has become generally accepted that this is something that happens. Birds use potpourri, and apparently, to good effect.

And now a new study indicates that certain birds harvest nicotine laced cigarette remains to use in their nests. From the abstract:

Birds are known to respond to nest-dwelling parasites by altering behaviours. Some bird species, for example, bring fresh plants to the nest, which contain volatile compounds that repel parasites. There is evidence that some birds living in cities incorporate cigarette butts into their nests, but the effect (if any) of this behaviour remains unclear. Butts from smoked cigarettes retain substantial amounts of nicotine and other compounds that may also act as arthropod repellents. We provide the first evidence that smoked cigarette butts may function as a parasite repellent in urban bird nests. The amount of cellulose acetate from butts in nests of two widely distributed urban birds was negatively associated with the number of nest-dwelling parasites. Moreover, when parasites were attracted to heat traps containing smoked or non-smoked cigarette butts, fewer parasites reached the former, presumably due to the presence of nicotine. Because urbanization changes the abundance and type of resources upon which birds depend, including nesting materials and plants involved in self-medication, our results are consistent with the view that urbanization imposes new challenges on birds that are dealt with using adaptations evolved elsewhere.

The next stage in this research is obvious. We need to find out what birds living near tobacco farms do, or even better, what those living near wild tobacco do. If there is such a thing as wild tobacco.

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Suarez-Rodriguez, M., Lopez-Rull, I., & Macias Garcia, C. (2012). Incorporation of cigarette butts into nests reduces nest ectoparasite load in urban birds: new ingredients for an old recipe? Biology Letters, 9 (1), 20120931-20120931 DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2012.0931

Clark, l. and J. Russell Mason, 1985. Use of nest material as insecticidal and anti-pathogenic agents by the European Starling. Oecologia September 1985, Volume 67, Issue 2, pp 169-176

Lufma, Lucile, Marcel M Lambrechts, and Michel Raymond 2001. Aromatic plants in bird nests as a protection against blood-sucking flying insects? Behavioural Processes, Volume 56, Issue 2, 1 November 2001, Pages 113–120

Written by Greg
Greg Laden has been watching birds since they were still dinosaurs, but has remained the consummate amateur. This is probably because he needs better binoculars. Based in the Twin Cities, Minnesota, Greg is a biological anthropologist and Africanist, who writes and teaches about Evolution, especially of humans. He also blogs at Scienceblogs.com. Greg's beat is Bird Evolutionary Biology. One could say that knowing the science of birds can make the birds more interesting. But really, knowing about the birds that go with the science is more likely to make the science more interesting. And thus, birding and Neo Darwinian Theory go hand in hand. Darwin was, after all, a pretty serious birder. Greg has seen a bird eat a monkey in the wild.