Vanity of the Flamingos
 
 
     
 
Flamingos use colourful cosmetics to  enhance feathers 
 

     
By  Victoria Gill 

Science and nature reporter,  BBC News 
 




Flamingos in the wild use pigments as "cosmetics" to  enhance the colour of 
their plumage, according to scientists.  
Researchers studying greater flamingos in the wetlands of southern  Spain 
found that the birds rubbed pigmented secretions onto their  feathers.  
They produce the pigments in glands near the base of their tails.  
The scientists describe in the journal Behavioural Ecology and  
Sociobiology how the birds use the pigments to signal to potential mates.   
The researchers identified pigments called carotenoids in the mixture  of 
wax oil that the birds secrete in their preen glands.  
They noticed that, as well as smoothing and tidying their feathers,  many 
birds deliberately rubbed their cheeks against the preen gland and  then 
immediately onto their neck, breast and back feathers.  
Reddish-orange carotenoid pigments in the oils then brightened the  
signature pink hue of the birds' feathers.  
High maintenance 
Juan Amat from the Donana Biological Station in Spain led the study.   
He said that the birds appeared to "manipulate the colour of their  
plumage" as a signal of their quality.  
Since it takes time and energy to apply the pigments, being more  colourful 
could be a powerful visual signal of a healthy, well-nourished  flamingo 
with time to take care of its appearance.  
"The rubbing is time-consuming," Dr Amat told BBC News. "And the more  
frequently the birds practise it, the more coloured they appear.       
SOURCES 
 



_Read  Juan Amat's article on cosmetic-using flamingos_ 
(http://www.springerlink.com/content/r098086680412q50/)  
_Find out  more about the greater flamingo on BBC Wildlife Finder_ 
(http://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/species/Greater_Flamingo)  

"If the birds stop the rubbing, [their] plumage colour fades in a few  days 
because carotenoids bleach quickly in the sunlight."  
This means that, like with make-up, frequent reapplication is necessary  to 
stay colourful.  
The scientists have not directly investigated how this cosmetic use  
benefits the birds, but they think that the more colourful flamingos might  
have 
more success in finding a mate.  
"We found that the more coloured birds started breeding earlier than  paler 
ones," explained Dr Amat.  
"So by mating to a colourful bird an individual may increase its  
reproductive success, as from previous studies we know that the first  pairs to 
start 
breeding gain access to the best breeding sites."  
And there is more to the story of cosmetic-using flamingos than this  one 
study, according to Dr Amat.  
"We have data indicating that females make-up much more often than  males - 
just like in humans," he told BBC News.  
"Also, we know that flamingos apply make-up more often in better  habitats, 
and that the more coloured birds obtain food of better quality."   
Professor Matthew Anderson from Saint Joseph's University in  Philadelphia, 
US, said the study provided "convincing evidence that  plumage colouration 
may be involved in mate choice in these birds".  

He added: "The beautiful pink plumage of flamingos has long captured  the 
attention of the general public. It [now] appears that flamingos may  be 
paying as much attention to their vibrant colouration as we are." 

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

Reply via email to