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Crested Auklets are small seabirds that nest on remote cliffs in the Northern Pacific and the Bering Sea. But it’s their smell that really sets these birds apart. They smell like tangerines! Experiments show that females go for males that emit the strongest scents.
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BirdNote®
Crested Auklets Entice Their Mates with Scent
Written by Bob Sundstrom
This is BirdNote.
[Crested Auklet calls]
Crested Auklets are small seabirds that nest on remote cliffs in the Northern Pacific and the Bering Sea. But it’s their smell that really sets these birds apart. They smell like tangerines!
Native peoples of the Bering Sea islands have known about this for a long time, but for some reason early European and American naturalists who carefully described the region’s wildlife in every other way never commented on the birds’ distinctive odor.
Now, that whiff of citrus on the salt air has become big news in the study of birds. That’s because the scent - which is only produced during the breeding season - is a rare example of a bird producing an odor to entice mates.
The female inspects a potential mate by pushing her beak into a male’s neck feathers, where his special scent is concentrated.
It appears to be a crucial sniff test. Field experiments show that females go for males who emit the strongest scents.
Scientists think this scent could have other purposes too. The birds give off the odor more strongly when they’re stressed. And the smell seems to also help keep parasites away.
For a long time, scientists thought most birds didn’t rely much on their sense of smell at all. But over the last few decades, that’s changing.
[Crested Auklet calls]
For BirdNote, I’m Mary McCann.
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Producer: John Kessler
Managing Producer: Jason Saul
Editor: Ashley Ahearn
Associate Producer: Ellen Blackstone
Assistant Producer: Mark Bramhill
Narrator: Mary McCann
Bird sounds provided by the Xeno-canto Foundation. Recorded by Ryan P. O'Donnell.
BirdNote’s theme was composed and played by Nancy Rumbel and John Kessler.
© 2019 BirdNote June 2019 / August 2022
ID# CRAU-02-2019-07-24 CRAU-02
https://news.nationalgeographic.com/2018/05/birds-animals-sex-courtship…
history of evidence of scent
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10336-007-0185-6