Nidification is the process of making a
nest. Nidification is with most
birds the beginning of the
breeding season, but with many it is a labor that is scamped if not shirked. Some of the
auk
tribe place their single
egg on a bare ledge of
rock, where its peculiar conical shape is but a precarious
safeguard when rocked by the wind or stirred by the
thronging crowd of its parents' fellows. The stone-curlew
and the goatsucker deposit their egsfdsfsdfgs without the
slightest preparation of the soil on which they rest; yet
this is nodfsdfsdfsdfsdf done at haphazard, for no birds can
be more constant in selecting, almost to an inch, the very
same spot which year after year they choose for their
procreant cradle. In marked contrast to such artless care stand
the wonderful structures, which others such as the
tailorbird, the bottle
titmouse or the fantail warbler, build for the comfort
or safety of their young. But every variety of disposition
may be found in the class. The apteryx seems to entrust its
abnormally big egg to an excavation among the roots of a
tree fern; while a band of female
ostriches scrape holes in the desert-sand and therein
promiscuously drop their eggs and leave the task of
incubation to the male. Some megapodes bury their eggs in
sand, leaving thorn to come to maturity by the mere warmth
of the ground, while others raise a huge hotbed of dead
leaves wherein they deposit theirs, and the young are
hatched without further care on the part of either parent.
Some of the grebes and rails seem to avail themselves in a
less degree of the heat generated by vegetable decay and,
dragging from the bottom or sides of the waters they
frequent fragments of aquatic plants, form of them a rude
half-floating mass which is piled on some growing water-weed
but these birds do not spurn the duties of maternity.
Many of the
gulls,
sandpipers and plovers lay their eggs in a shallow pit which
they hollow out in the soil, and then as incubation proceeds
add thereto a low breastwork of stems. The ringed plover
commonly places its eggs on shingle, which they so much
resemble in color, but when breeding on grassy uplands it paves the nest-hole with small stones.
Pigeons mostly make an artless platform of sticks so
loosely laid together that their pearly treasures may be
perceived from beneath by the inquisitive observer.
The
magpie, as though self-conscious that its own thieving
habits may be imitated by its neighbors, surrounds its nest
with a hedge of thorns. Very many birds of almost every
group bore holes in some sandy cliff, and at the end of
their tunnel deposit their eggs with or without [bedding.
Such bedding, too, is very various in character; thus, while
the sheidduck and the sand martin supply the softest of
materials the one of down from her own body, the other of
feathers collected by dint of diligent search, the
kingfisher forms a couch of the undigested spiny fish bones
which she ejects in pellets from her own stomach. Other
birds, such as the woodpeckers, hew holes in living trees,
even when the timber is of considerable hardness, and
therein establish their nursery. Some of the swifts secrete
from their salivary glands a fluid which rapidly hardens as
it dries on exposure to the air into a substance resembling
isinglass, and thus furnish the "edible birds' nests" that
are the delight of Chinese epicures. In the architecture of
nearly all the passerine birds, too, some salivary secretion
seems to play an important part. By its aid they are enabled
to moisten and bend the otherwise refractory twigs and
straws, and glue them to their place. Spider webs also are
employed with great advantage for the purpose last
mentioned, but perhaps chiefly to attach fragments of moss
and lichen so as to render the whole structure less obvious
to the eye of the spoiler. The tailorbird deliberately spins
a thread of cotton and therewith stitches together the edges
of a pair of leaves to make a receptacle for its nest.
Beautiful, too, is the felt fabricated of fur or hairs by
the various species of titmouse, while many birds
ingeniously weave into a compact mass both animal and
vegetable fibers, forming an admirable insulating medium
which guards the eggs from the extremes of temperature
outside. Such a structure may be open and cup-shaped,
supported from below as that of the chaffinch and goldfinch,
domed like that of the wren and bottle-titmouse, slung
hammock wise as in the case of the golden-crested wren and
the orioles, or suspended by a single cord as with certain
grosbeaks and hummingbirds. Certain warblers (Aedon and
Thamnobia) invariably lay a piece of shedded snake skin in
their nests-to repel, it has been suggested, marauding
lizards who may thereby fear the neighborhood of a
deadly enemy.
The
clay-built edifices of the swallow and martin are known to
everybody, and the nuthatch plasters up the gaping mouth of
its nest-hole till only a postern large enough for entrance
and exit, but easy of defense, is left. In South America the
ovenbirds (Furnariidae) construct on the branches of trees
globular ovens, so to speak, of mud, wherein the eggs are
laid and the young hatched. The flamingo erects in the
marshes it frequents a mound of earth sometimes 2 feet in
height, with a cavity atop. The females of the hornbills
submit to incarceration during this interesting period, the
males immuring them by a barrier of mud, leaving only a
small window to admit air and food. But though in a general
way the dictates of hereditary instinct are rigidly observed
by birds, in many species a remarkable degree of elasticity
is exhibited, or the rule of habit is rudely broken. Thus
the falcon, whose ordinary eyry is on the beetling cliff,
will for the convenience of procuring prey condescend to lay
its eggs on the ground in a marsh, or appropriate the nest
of some other bird in a tree. The golden eagle, too,
remarkably adapts itself to circumstances, now rearing its
young on a precipitous ledge, now on the arm of an ancient
monarch of the forest and again on a treeless plain, making
a humble home amid grass and herbage. Herons will breed
according to circumstances, in an open fen, on banks or, as
is most usual, on lofty trees. Such changes are easy to
understand. The instinct of finding food for the family is
predominant, and where most food is there will the feeders
be gathered together. This explains, in all likelihood, the
associated bands of ospreys or fish hawks, which in North
America breed, or used to breed, in large companies where
sustenance is plentiful, though in the Old World the same species brooks not the society of
aught but its mate. Birds there are of eminently social
predilections.
In
Europe, apart from sea birds, whose congregations are
universal and known to all, only the heron, the fieldfare
and the rook habitually flock during the breeding season;
but in other parts of the world many birds unite in company
at that time, and in none possibly is this habit so strongly
developed as in the anis of the neotropical region, the
republican swallow of North America and the sociable
grosbeak of South Africa, which last joins nest to nest
until the tree is said to break down under the accumulated
weight of the common edifice. In the strongest contrast to
these amiable qualities is the parasitic nature of the
cuckoos of the Old World and the cowbirds of the New. The
egg of the parasite is introduced into the nest of the dupe,
and after the necessary incubation by the fond fool of a
foster mother the interloper successfully counterfeits the
heirs, who perish miserably, victims of his superior
strength. The whole process has been often watched, but the
reflective naturalist will pause to ask how such a state of
things came about, and there is not much to satisfy his
inquiry. Certain it is that some birds whether by mistake or
stupidity do not infrequently lay their eggs in the nests of
others. It is within the knowledge of many that pheasant and
partridge eggs are often laid in the same nest, and gull
eggs have been found in the nests of eider ducks and vice
versa; a redstart and a pied flycatcher will lay their eggs
in the same convenient hole, the forest being rather
deficient in such accommodation; an owl and a duck will
resort to the same nest box, set up by a scheming woodsman
for his own advantage; and the starling, which constantly
dispossesses the green woodpecker, sometimes discovers that
the rightful heir of the domicile has to be brought up by
the intruding tenant. In all such cases it is not possible
to say which species is so constituted as to obtain the
mastery, but it is not difficult to conceive that in the
course of ages that which was driven from its home might
thrive through the fostering of its young by the invader,
and thus the abandonment of domestic habits and duties might
become a direct gain to the evicted householder.
The correlation between
nests and the coloration of the birds has been
investigated by A. R. Wallace. Accordingly he divides birds
into two main groups, first those in which the sexes are
alike and of conspicuous or showy colors, and which
nidificate in a covered site; secondly, those in which the
males are showy and the females somber, and which use open
sites for their nests.
The many exceptions to these generalizations caused J. A.
Allen to write an adverse criticism. C. Dixon has reviewed
the question from Wallace's point of view. He established
the following categories.
1. Birds in which the
plumage of the male is bright and conspicuous in color,
and that of the female dull and somber, and which nidificate
in open sites. In these very common cases, the female alone
incubates, and obviously derives protection from its
inconspicuous plumage.
2. Birds in which the plumage of both sexes is showy or
brilliant in color, and which nidificate in open nests. This
group forms one of those exceptions, which at first sight
appear seriously to affect the validity of Wallace's theory.
In most of the cases, however, the birds, as, for instance,
crows,
gulls,
herons, are either well able to defend themselves and their
nests or, as, for instance, the sandpipers, they seek safety for themselves in flight,
relying upon the protective tints of their eggs or young.
3. Birds in which the male is less brilliant than the
female, and which nidificate in open nests. Such birds are
exceedingly few, e.g. the Phalaropes, the common cassowary,
the emu, a carrion hawk (Milvago leucurus) from the Falkland
Islands, an Australian treecreeper (Climacteris erythrops)
and an Australian goatsucker (Eurystopodus albigularis). In
all these cases the male performs the duty of incubation.
The male tinamous do the same, although they do not differ from
their mates, but the conspicuously colored male
ostrich takes this duty upon himself during the night.
4. Birds in which both sexes are brightly colored, and
which rear their young in holes or covered nests. For
instance, the gaudy colored
rollers, bee-eaters, kingfishers, the hoopoe, hornbills,
toucans, parrots, tits, the sheldrake and many others.
5. Birds in which both sexes are dull in color, and which
build covered nests from motives of safety other than
concealment. For example, the
swifts (Cypselus), the
sand martin (Cotyle riparia),
wrens,
dippers and
owls.
6. Birds in which the female is duller in color than the
male, and which nidificate in covered nests. For example,
the redstart (Ruticilla phoenicura), the pied flycatcher (Muscicapa atricapilla),
rock thrushes (Monticola),
chats (Saxicola) and
robin-chats (Thamnobia), and birds of the
genus Malurus. In some of these cases the showy male
bird assists in incubation, the kind of nest allowing him to
do so with safety. Similar difficulties beset the
generalizations concerning the
correlation of the color of the eggs and the exposed or
hidden condition of the nest. The eggs of most birds which
breed in holes, or even in covered nests, are white, but the
number of exceptions is so great that no general rule can be
laid down to this effect. Conversely the number of birds
that lay purely white eggs in open nests, such as
pigeons, is also large.
The eggs of
owls
are always white, whether they are deposited in holes on the
bare ground or in open nests in a tree. The eggs of the
goshawk are white, but those of its small relation, the
sparrow hawk, are always blotched, the nest of both
being built precisely in the same kind of position. In
regard to the almost countless cases of spotted eggs in
holes or covered nests, of which so many groups of birds
furnish examples either wholly or in part, it has been
suggested that the
species in question has taken to hiding its eggs in
times comparatively recent, and has not yet, got rid of the
ancestral habit of secreting and depositing
pigment.
Most of the smaller Passeres seem to hatch their young in
from 13-15 days. The shortest period, only 10 days, is
recorded of the small Zosterops coerulescens; the largest,
amounting to about 8 weeks, is that of some of the larger
Ratitae, penguins and the condor. The best list, comprising
birds of most groups, is that by W. Evans. Speaking broadly,
the largest birds lay the largest eggs and require the
longest time for incubation, but there are very many
exceptions, and only birds of the same group can be compared
with each other. The domestic chicken takes 21 days, but the
pheasant, though so very nearly allied, takes 2 or 3 days
longer, and even the small partridge requires 24 clays. The
mallard takes 26, the domestic duck 27, the musk duck 35 days, like most of the
swans.
The
cuckoo, with 13 to 14 days, seems to have adapted itself to
the short period of its foster parents. The whole question
still affords ample opportunities of experimental
investigation and comparison. The condition of the newly
hatched birds also varies extremely. The Nidifugae are born
with their eyes open, are thinly clothed with neossoptiles
of simple structure, leave the nest on the first day and
feed themselves. The Nidicolae are born blind, remain a long
time in the nest and have to be fed by their parents. Taken
as a whole, the Nidifugae comprise most of the
phylogenetically older groups; but many of these may include
some closely allied members which have reached the
developmental level of the Nidicolae: for instance, some
Alcidae, the pigeons, Sphenisci, Tubinares, Ciconiae. While
in the first category the sense, tegumentary and locomotory
organs are far advanced, these are retarded in the Nidicolae,
the development of these structures being shifted onto the
post-embryonic
period. Yet the length of the incubation is by no means
always longer in the Nidifugae, when compared with
equal-sized Nidicolae.
References
- This article incorporates text from the
Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition,
a publication now in the
public domain.