Can chicks smell their parents? No evidence of olfactory parent recognition in a shorebird

Marc Gilles, Sama Zefania, Tafitasoa J. Mijoro, Innes C. Cuthill, Tamás Székely, Barbara A. Caspers

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

In many taxa, young can recognize their parents using olfactory cues. Yet this possibility has been overlooked in birds, because they were long assumed to have a poor sense of smell. While evidence is growing that birds use odours to communicate, olfactory parent recognition has only been documented in two altricial bird species. Whether chicks of precocial species use olfaction to recognize parents is currently unknown. Parent recognition is particularly important in precocial species, as chicks leave the nest shortly after hatching, and may lose contact with their parents and encounter other conspecific adults. We conducted Y-maze trials in the wild to test whether chicks of a precocial shorebird, the white-fronted plover, Anarhynchus marginatus, can recognize parents via olfaction. We tested first whether chicks show a preference for the odour (preen oil) of an unfamiliar adult over a control (no odour), and second whether chicks show a preference for the odour of a parent over that of an unfamiliar adult. Plover chicks spent as much time with the odour of an unfamiliar adult as with the control, and as much time with the odour of a parent as with that of an unfamiliar adult. Therefore, we found no evidence that chicks react to the preen oil odour of a conspecific adult, nor that they can discriminate a parent using preen oil odours. It may be that chicks of this species can discriminate parental and foreign odours but that our experiment failed to detect it, that they rely on other (e.g. auditory) cues, or that they do not need to discriminate between parents and foreign conspecific adults.

Original languageEnglish
JournalAnimal Behaviour
Early online date8 Sept 2024
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 8 Sept 2024

Data Availability Statement

Data and R code used in the analyses are available in the Supplementary Material and at the repository PUB, Publications at Bielefeld University (https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2988559, https://doi.org/10.4119/unibi/2988559).

Acknowledgements

We thank Thomas Schmitz for building the Y-maze and Ignace Delula ‘Vavaly’ for his assistance in searching for plover families. We thank the two anonymous referees for comments that improved the manuscript.

Keywords

  • avian olfaction
  • bird smell
  • Charadriiformes
  • chemical cue
  • field experiment
  • kin recognition
  • Madagascar
  • parental care
  • parent–offspring communication
  • scent gland

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
  • Animal Science and Zoology

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