Abstract

BackgroundThe plumage of birds is important for flying, insulation and social communication. Contour feathers cover most of the avian body and among other functions they provide a critical insulation layer against heat loss. Feather structure and composition are known to vary among individuals, which in turn determines variation in the insulation properties of the feather. However, the extent and the proximate mechanisms underlying this variation remain unexplored.Methodology/Principal FindingsWe analyzed contour feather structure from two different great tit populations adapted to different winter regimes, one northern population in Oulu (Finland) and one southern population in Lund (Sweden). Great tits from the two populations differed significantly in feather structure. Birds from the northern population had a denser plumage but consisting of shorter feathers with a smaller proportion containing plumulaceous barbs, compared with conspecifics from the southern population. However, differences disappeared when birds originating from the two populations were raised and moulted in identical conditions in a common-garden experiment located in Oulu, under ad libitum nutritional conditions. All birds raised in the aviaries, including adult foster parents moulting in the same captive conditions, developed a similar feather structure. These feathers were different from that of wild birds in Oulu but similar to wild birds in Lund, the latter moulting in more benign conditions than those of Oulu.Conclusions/SignificanceWild populations exposed to different conditions develop contour feather differences either due to plastic responses or constraints. Environmental conditions, such as nutrient availability during feather growth play a crucial role in determining such differences in plumage structure among populations.

Highlights

  • Plumage is the most diagnostic trait in birds and plays an essential role in flying, insulation and social communication

  • Contour feathers cover most of the avian body providing insulation from the environment

  • Contour feathers play a key role in social communication as the number, position and growth dynamics of barbs and barbules influence the deposition of pigments and the ultrastructure of the feather

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Summary

Introduction

Plumage is the most diagnostic trait in birds and plays an essential role in flying, insulation and social communication. Contour feathers cover most of the avian body providing insulation from the environment They are composed of a shaft with regularly spaced branches (barbs) on each side, which are in turn branched with barbules. Contour feathers play a key role in social communication as the number, position and growth dynamics of barbs and barbules influence the deposition of pigments and the ultrastructure of the feather. Such properties determine the feather’s visual characteristics, and thereby their signaling properties [14,15]. Feather structure and composition are known to vary among individuals, which in turn determines variation in the insulation properties of the feather. The extent and the proximate mechanisms underlying this variation remain unexplored

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