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      Dark tree cavities - a challenge for hole nesting birds?

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      Journal of Avian Biology
      Wiley-Blackwell

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          Nesting Success in Altricial Birds

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            Anti-predator adaptations in nesting Marsh Tits Parus palustris: the role of nest-site security

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              Kiwi Forego Vision in the Guidance of Their Nocturnal Activities

              Background In vision, there is a trade-off between sensitivity and resolution, and any eye which maximises information gain at low light levels needs to be large. This imposes exacting constraints upon vision in nocturnal flying birds. Eyes are essentially heavy, fluid-filled chambers, and in flying birds their increased size is countered by selection for both reduced body mass and the distribution of mass towards the body core. Freed from these mass constraints, it would be predicted that in flightless birds nocturnality should favour the evolution of large eyes and reliance upon visual cues for the guidance of activity. Methodology/Principal Findings We show that in Kiwi (Apterygidae), flightlessness and nocturnality have, in fact, resulted in the opposite outcome. Kiwi show minimal reliance upon vision indicated by eye structure, visual field topography, and brain structures, and increased reliance upon tactile and olfactory information. Conclusions/Significance This lack of reliance upon vision and increased reliance upon tactile and olfactory information in Kiwi is markedly similar to the situation in nocturnal mammals that exploit the forest floor. That Kiwi and mammals evolved to exploit these habitats quite independently provides evidence for convergent evolution in their sensory capacities that are tuned to a common set of perceptual challenges found in forest floor habitats at night and which cannot be met by the vertebrate visual system. We propose that the Kiwi visual system has undergone adaptive regressive evolution driven by the trade-off between the relatively low rate of gain of visual information that is possible at low light levels, and the metabolic costs of extracting that information.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Avian Biology
                Journal of Avian Biology
                Wiley-Blackwell
                09088857
                September 2012
                September 06 2012
                : 43
                : 5
                : 454-460
                Article
                10.1111/j.1600-048X.2012.05704.x
                f1e8a03e-6754-4dcd-b22a-57736a1f846b
                © 2012

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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