Influence of bill shape on ectoparasite load in Western Scrub-Jays

Update Item Information
Publication Type Journal Article
School or College College of Science
Department Biology
Creator Clayton, Dale H.
Other Author Moyer, Brett R.; Peterson, A. Townsend
Title Influence of bill shape on ectoparasite load in Western Scrub-Jays
Date 2002
Description Populations of the Western Scrub-Jay (Aphelocoma californica) have bills specialized for feeding in their respective habitats. Populations in oak habitat have hooked bills, whereas those in pinyon habitat have pointed bills with a reduced maxillary overhang. Work on other bird species shows that the bill overhang is essential for efficient preening to control ectoparasites. Given the importance of this overhang, we predicted that louse-infested jays with pointed bills would have higher louse loads than those with hooked bills. We compared the number of lice on 65 pointed-billed (4 infested) and 105 hooked-billed (17 infested) birds. Despite their lower incidence of louse infestation, pointed-billed birds had significantly more lice than hooked-billed birds, supporting our prediction.
Type Text
Publisher Cooper Ornithological Society
First Page 675
Last Page 678
Subject Ectoparasite load; Bill shape; Aphelocoma californica
Subject LCSH Western scrub jay; Western scrub jay -- Parasites; Bill (Anatomy); Lice
Language eng
Bibliographic Citation Moyer, B. R., Peterson, A. T., & Clayton, D. H. (2002). Influence of bill shape on ectoparasite load in Western Scrub-Jays. Condor, 104, 675-8.
Rights Management (c)Cooper Ornithological Society
Format Medium application/pdf
Format Extent 710,177 bytes
Identifier ir-main,6669
ARK ark:/87278/s696021n
Setname ir_uspace
ID 705941
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s696021n
Back to Search Results