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FW: Novel Flamingo feeding apparatus!

To: "Birding-aus (E-mail)" <>
Subject: FW: Novel Flamingo feeding apparatus!
From: "Philip Veerman" <>
Date: Mon, 20 Nov 2006 23:01:35 +1100
MessageHi All,
Some contributors like to post links to other people's bird related research. I 
don't often do so but I thought this one was likely to be worthy of interest to 
some. It talks of "pink flamingos" but I thought they all were.

Philip

Subject: Novel Flamingo feeding apparatus!
Water Wings for Eating

By Mary Beckman

ScienceNOW Daily News

31 October 2006

Anatomist Larry Witmer never expected to find tissues engorged with 
blood--erectile tissues--in bird beaks. But new research on a pink flamingo 
reveals two pads of tissue under the tongue that can expand, provide mechanical 
support and stiffness to the bottom of the mouth, and probably help the birds 
eat with their heads upside down, as flamingos are wont to do. The finding 
might help biologists determine how filter feeding--seen in birds and 
mammals--first evolved.



Pink flamingos eat by sucking water through their mouths and straining out 
diatoms and plankton. Ducks and geese also filter feed, but flamingos do so 
with their heads upside down, using their tongues like pistons to drag water in 
and push it through their mouths' filtering apparatus. Little else is known 
about the birds' unique technique for eating or how it evolved.



Witmer, of Ohio University in Athens, and his colleagues originally planned to 
compare blood vessels in the skulls of flamingos to those of other birds. The 
Brevard Zoo in Melbourne, Florida, offered Witmer and his team a recently 
deceased pink flamingo. First, they infused barium-rich latex into the animal's 
arteries and veins. Using more barium in the veins than arteries allowed them 
to distinguish which were which in a CT scanner. The team was surprised to find 
two blood-filled sinuses under and on either side of the tongue, expandable 
structures that had never been observed in birds before.



Finding such erectile tissue--more commonly associated with sexual organs--in 
the mouth is unusual. "It had us scratching our heads for awhile," says Witmer. 
Based on the tissue's proximity to the feeding apparatus under the tongue, 
Witmer's team suggests the tissues help flamingoes filter food from water, a 
novel role for blood vessels in the head. Although they haven't measured these 
so-called paralingual sinuses in live flamingoes yet, the scientists believes 
their fattened state is several times larger than when deflated. In addition, 
CT scans revealed that the tissues wear down the jawbone and form a depression, 
the team reports in the October issue of The Anatomical Record. A cursory check 
of other flamingo skeletons revealed the depression on all of them, but not the 
skeletons of other birds.



"This is pioneering work," says ornithologist Richard Prum of Yale University. 
"Flamingos evolved a whole new way to feed, with a new orientation of the 
head," he says. "And nobody has come up with a role for the vascular system in 
foraging before." Evolutionary biologist Marcel van Tuinen of the University of 
North Carolina, Wilmington, says the depression in the jawbone can be used to 
trace the origins of filter feeding in evolution. In birds, this type of 
feeding is unique to flamingos, but it also resembles the feeding strategy of 
the baleen whale, he says.



http://sciencenow.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/2006/1031/2?etoc


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