Abstract

Honest advertisement models posit that only individuals in good health can produce and/or maintain ornamental traits. Even though disease has profound effects on condition, few studies have experimentally tested its effects on trait expression and even fewer have identified a mechanistic basis for these effects. Recent evidence suggests that black and white, but not grey, plumage colors of black-capped chickadees (Poecile atricapillus) are sexually selected. We therefore hypothesized that birds afflicted with avian keratin disorder, a condition that affects the beak and other keratinized tissues, would show reduced expression of black and white, but not grey, color. UV-vis spectrometry of black-capped chickadees affected and unaffected by avian keratin disorder revealed spectral differences between them consistent with this hypothesis. To elucidate the mechanistic bases of these differences, we used scanning electron microscopy (SEM), electron-dispersive x-ray spectroscopy (EDX) and a feather cleaning experiment. SEM showed extreme feather soiling in affected birds, and EDX revealed that this was most likely from external sources. Experimentally cleaning the feathers increased color expression of ornamental feathers of affected, but not unaffected, birds. These data provide strong evidence that black and white color is an honest indicator in chickadees, and that variation in feather dirtiness, likely due to differences in preening behavior is a mechanism for this association.

Highlights

  • Honest advertisement models posit that expression of ornamental traits should be linked to the overall quality of an organism [1,2,3]

  • An epizootic termed avian keratin disorder has recently been documented among black-capped chickadees (Poecile atricapillus), northwestern crows (Corvus caurinus), and other avian species in Alaska and the Pacific Northwest region of North America [19,20]

  • We analyzed the composition of three unwashed feathers of affected birds using electrondispersive x-ray spectroscopy (EDX) to determine if the material observed on barbs and barbules was the product of abnormal accumulation of amorphous keratin produced by feather cells

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Summary

Introduction

Honest advertisement models posit that expression of ornamental traits should be linked to the overall quality of an organism [1,2,3]. An epizootic termed avian keratin disorder has recently been documented among black-capped chickadees (Poecile atricapillus), northwestern crows (Corvus caurinus), and other avian species in Alaska and the Pacific Northwest region of North America [19,20]. This condition results in deformation of the beak (figure 1), and may be accompanied by lesions in other keratinized tissues of the skin, legs, feet, claws, and feathers [19,20]. Dirt can dramatically alter reflectance, in the UV spectrum [24], so this could represent a mechanistic link between the expression of plumage reflectance and individual condition in chickadees

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