Ontogeny
Learned Behavior: Color Preference
Although the eggshell removal behavior of shorebirds is considered an
instinctive behavior, their preferential association with color seems
to be a learned response that enhances their instinctive behavior.
Observations by Tinbergen (1963)
Tinbergen conducted an experiment where the Common Black-headed Gulls
were given dummy eggs of unnatural colors, such as blue or red, to
incubate in their nests. The birds were observed to
preferentially remove the dummy shells of the same color as their own
eggs – white. This behavior enhances its anti-predation
function, since by removing the white dummy eggs, the birds make their
own eggs in their nests less conspicuous for the predators.

Predators of the Common Black-headed Gulls such as Herring Gulls and
Carrion Crows were seen to have very little difficulty locating
well-camouflaged eggs. Tinbergen tested the Herring Gulls and
Carrion Crows’ predation on different colors of eggshells to
explain Common Black-headed Gulls’ tendency to remove white
eggshells despite predators’ ability to locate the
well-camouflaged eggs. He found that although all different
colors of the eggs were eaten by the predators, the white ones were
discovered more frequently. This result explains the Common
Black-headed Gulls’ tendency to remove white eggshells over any
other colored ones.

Observations by D.Max Snodderly Jr. (1978)
D. Max Snodderly Jr. investigated laughing gulls’ (Larus
atricilla) visual preference for eggshell removal behavior, by
preference tests where the shell models were matched to the darkness of
the eggs in the nest. The laughing gulls showed strong color
preference, especially for orange. Preference for natural models
was observed, which supports Tinbergen’s findings. However,
no preference difference between the natural models and solid white
models was observed, which highlights the importance of color, and not
the pattern, of the eggshells.

In the same experiment, D. Max Snodderly Jr. also found that the
laughing gulls showed no preference for the brightness of
eggshells. The control tests with white, grey and black models
showed no difference in preference. Thus, the brightness plays a
very little role in eggshell removal behavior of the laughing gulls;
the preference of the eggshell removing behavior is heavily based on
color of the eggshells.
Learned Behavior: Distance between the Eggshell Disposal from the Nest
Tinbergen further showed through his experiments that the
further from
an intact egg the empty shells were disposed, the safer the intact
eggs. To protect their chicks from getting attacked by predators,
the Common Black-Headed Gulls learned to dispose the empty eggshells,
after their chicks hatch, as far away from their nest as possible.
However, leaving the chicks unsupervised in their nests for too
long increases their offsprings' vulnerability to the
predators. So the parent gulls cannot go too far away to
dispose the
eggshells and leave their offspring unattained for too long.
Black-headed gull hatching
|