Abstract

Evidence is presented, obtained with two species of jays, that these birds differ in the ways in which they prepare bombardier beetles for ingestion. Blue Jays subject bombardiers to “anting,” a procedure by which the beetles are induced to eject their spray into the plumage of the birds. Florida Scrub Jays, in contrast, which live in an area where the soil is sandy, subject bombardiers to “sand-wiping,” causing the beetles to eject their spray into the substrate. Both strategies lend themselves also to pre-ingestive treatment of other chemically protected arthropods. Anting is a strategy widely practiced by birds, possibly because it can be put to use no matter what the nature of the terrain. Sand-wiping, as implied by its name (which we here coin), may be of more restricted occurrence, given that it can be carried out only on loose, penetrable soil.

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