There’s a good reason the birds all look the same age
ELISABETH M. BROWN
Among many familiar animals, the young are small copies of the
adults: all furry mammals (humans included), lizards, snakes, frogs
and toads, fish, snails, crabs, lobsters and others. Animals with
hard outer shells, like crabs and lobsters, have to shed their shells
to grow; with each molt the animal is larger.
But some animals have a different system.
Visitors to the open space are familiar with the intensely black
stink beetles, Eleodes, often seen walking park trails. When
challenged, they stand on their heads for a threat display. If you
persist, they can give off a bad odor.
Sometimes there are several in a small area, but they are always
about the same size.
Why don’t we see any small ones? The answer is the beetle you see
has always been this size. When it was younger, it was a grub (a sort
of naked caterpillar), living in the soil and feeding on underground
plant parts. These animals undergo a major body reorganization when
they grow up; they go from grub to adult beetle. Other animals that
do this are moths and butterflies. The caterpillar rolls up into a
pupa and emerges as a full-sized adult.
Among vertebrates (animals with backbones), the rule is that the
young are small. Bear cubs, cougar kittens, speckled baby deer, lambs
and colts cavort with their parents and gradually grow to adult size
and proportions.
But when did you last see a small robin on the lawn with its
mother? A small gull at the beach? All the house sparrows at Cafe
Zinc are the same size.
Birds fly for their living, and there’s the difference.
You can’t arbitrarily change the dimensions on an airplane and
expect it to fly the same way (or at all). So it is for birds. Expert
birders can identify a bird by its characteristic flying pattern. How
it flies is a careful balance between shape and size that varies
between species and types of birds. Every species of bird has arrived
at a particular engineering solution. Change the size and it all
falls apart.
Birds that must fly to feed themselves do not leave the nest until
they are fully grown. Their feathers are often colored differently
from their parents (as in the case of gulls and hawks), but when the
young fledge and leave the nest, they must be adult size and weight.
The exceptions are the ground birds -- quails, partridges,
pheasants, shorebirds, chickens, roadrunners -- and those that can
paddle on the water to their food, like ducks and geese. These birds
can grow up somewhat like young furry animals do. That’s why we see
ducklings or small chickens growing up as miniature copies of their
parents. But they don’t fly until they’re full sized and their adult
flight feathers have grown in.
Finally, what about penguins? Interestingly enough, since they
must “fly” underwater to catch fish, they follow the flying birds’
rule. Their parents feed them until the young are adult size, at
which time they must walk to the coast and jump into the Great
Southern Ocean.
It could be a metaphor for life.
* ELISABETH M. BROWN is a biologist and the president of Laguna
Greenbelt Inc.
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