PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

UConn scientists discover how to beat monk parakeets at their own game

Outsmarting birds by blocking the pathway to their nests

2014-09-30
(Press-News.org) In a study published this week in the online journal PeerJ, University of Connecticut researchers announce they have found a way to prevent Monk Parakeets (Myiopsitta monarchus), an invasive species of parrot, from building huge nests that create power outages and public hazards on utility poles by blocking their access to the electric lines that are the gateway to their nest sites.

The nests, which are built out of sticks and twigs, can weigh up to 200 pounds or more. The damage they cause can cost electric utility companies millions of dollars annually.

But, the brightly colored birds may have finally met their match. "Block their route along the lines, and you'll keep them from building nests in the first place," says the study's lead author Kevin Burgio, a Ph.D. student in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology (EEB) at the University of Connecticut.

Burgio and his co-authors studied the birds in order to find out if there was a way to block nest building activity on utility poles before it got started. They watched birds from the beginning of the nest-building process, and discovered that the parakeets carry sticks to the nest site by landing on the lines, and then walking to the spot where the line meets the pole, instead of flying there directly.

"They look like a guy walking a gangplank with a stick in his mouth," said co-author Margaret Rubega, an associate professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at UConn. Rubega, who is Burgio's Ph.D. advisor, is also Connecticut's State Ornithologist.

"They can't land on the pole itself," Burgio said, "because they need their beaks to climb up or down to where the line attaches to the pole, and they're using their beaks to hold the sticks. So, when they're starting a nest, they land on the line and walk to the pole, instead."

Once the nest is big enough to land on, the birds still use the line as a walkway most of the time. Burgio's study also showed that the parakeets drop the sticks often early in the nest building process and, if dropped, they are not picked up again. Instead, the birds fly off and pick up a fresh branch, and just start over.

The Monk Parakeets are native to subtropical South America and were introduced to the United States in the pet trade in the 1960s. Inevitably, some birds escaped or were released and they subsequently established breeding populations in Florida, Illinois, New York, and Connecticut, among others.

Bright green and noisy, the birds attract attention and ire from homeowners by cutting sticks out of live trees, and using them to build large, communal nests. Utility poles are a favorite substrate for nests and when those get big enough to bridge the gap between live electrical lines, they short the lines out, sometimes blowing out transformers and turning off the power in whole neighborhoods.

The report says Monk Parakeet nests in Florida caused 198 power outages in one five month period, leaving 10,000 people without power. Attempts to discourage the birds with owl decoys on utility poles have failed; when their nests are removed, they return quickly and build again. Killing the birds is unpopular, and repeated nest removals are costly for utility companies. In Florida, alone, utilities removed 3000 nests in a five year period, and spent an estimated $4.7 million.

"Knowing what we know now, we're confident that a device for keeping the birds from walking over the last foot or so of line to the pole will keep them from being able to start a nest on a utility pole," Bergio said.

Such a solution would make it possible for utility companies to keep the lights on in neighborhoods where the parrots live, without the cost of repeated nest removals and the damages that result when nests catch fire.

INFORMATION: Burgio and Rubega are working with Midsun Group, Inc., a manufacturer of utility equipment, to develop a device that uses the results of the study to exclude Monk Parakeets from utility poles.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Selectively rewiring the brain's circuitry to treat depression

2014-09-30
Philadelphia, PA, September 30, 2014 – On Star Trek, it is easy to take for granted the incredible ability of futuristic doctors to wave small devices over the heads of both humans and aliens, diagnose their problems through evaluating changes in brain activity or chemistry, and then treat behavior problems by selectively stimulating relevant brain circuits. While that day is a long way off, transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) of the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex does treat symptoms of depression in humans by placing a relatively small device on a person's scalp ...

New material steals oxygen from the air

New material steals oxygen from the air
2014-09-30
Researchers from the University of Southern Denmark have synthesized crystalline materials that can bind and store oxygen in high concentrations. Just one spoon of the substance is enough to absorb all the oxygen in a room. The stored oxygen can be released again when and where it is needed. We do fine with the 21 per cent oxygen in the air around us. But sometimes we need oxygen in higher concentrations; for example lung patients must carry heavy oxygen tanks, cars using fuel cells need a regulated oxygen supply. Perhaps one day in the future even sunlight-driven "reversible" ...

Low-birth-weight children are particularly vulnerable to environmental influences

2014-09-30
Low birth weight children are more vulnerable to environmental influences than infants born with normal weight. When brought up with a great deal of sensitivity, they will be able to catch up in school, but on average they will not become better students than normal birth weight children. This result, provided by an international psychologist team, has confirmed the so-called diathesis-stress model of development for low birth weight populations. The researchers report their findings in the Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry. Theories on how environmental factors ...

Genetic test would help 'cut bowel cancer spread'

2014-09-30
Screening families of patients with bowel cancer for a genetic condition would cut their risk of developing bowel, womb, and ovarian cancers, new research has found. In a major study, Dr Ian Frayling from Cardiff University's School of Medicine and researchers from the University of Exeter's Medical School assessed the effectiveness of introducing a UK-wide screening programme for a genetic condition known as Lynch Syndrome. Lynch syndrome is a caused by changes in genes which check the spelling in DNA. The condition increases the risk of people developing cancer, ...

Bacteria may have ability to reduce impact of diazepam on UK river environments

2014-09-30
The natural photo degradation of diazepam (valium) and similar medicines – followed by bacterial breakdown – may reduce their potentially harmful impact on the UK's freshwater environment, a team of researchers has said. Diazepam – used to treat anxiety and other similar conditions – has been detected in rivers across the UK and Europe, having been released from waste water treatment plants. At the levels recorded, it has the potential to produce harmful ecological effects in surface waters, including changing the behaviour of fish shoals and their ability to sense danger ...

Entanglement made tangible

2014-09-30
Quantum entanglement refers to the "pairing" of two subatomic particles in such a way that they form a whole quantum system. Interest in entanglement is increasing today, as it challenges the foundations of quantum mechanics itself, and is also key for achieving quantum information processing and communication. Entanglement is thought to exist up to the everyday, or "macroscopic" realm – according to the predictions of quantum physics – but experimental proposals to show this often involve conditions that are difficult to achieve in today's labs. Publishing in Physical ...

Shape up quickly -- applies to fish, too!

Shape up quickly -- applies to fish, too!
2014-09-30
Fish can live in almost any aquatic environment on Earth, but when the climate changes and temperatures go up many species are pushed to the limit. The amount of time needed to adjust to new conditions could prove critical for how different species cope in the future, reveals a new study from researchers at the University of Gothenburg, published in the scientific journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B. Climate change continues apace thanks to increasing levels of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. The greenhouse effect has led not only to an increase in average ...

Dietary polyunsaturated fatty acids linked to smaller risk of coronary heart disease

2014-09-30
A recent study completed at the University of Eastern Finland shows that dietary polyunsaturated fatty acids may reduce the risk of coronary heart disease. The sources of polyunsaturated fatty acids include fish, vegetable oils, and nuts. The findings were published in Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis & Vascular Biology, an esteemed journal of the American Heart Association. Recent studies have not found an association between the consumption of saturated fats and the risk of cardiovascular diseases. It seems that the mere reduction of saturated fats from the diet does not ...

On the trail of the truffle flavor

On the trail of the truffle flavor
2014-09-30
This news release is available in German. FRANKFURT. Truffles, along with caviar, are among the most expensive foods in the world. Because they grow underground, people use trained dogs or pigs to find them. But the distinctive smell of truffles is not only of interest to gourmets. A group of German and French scientists under the direction of the Goethe University Frankfurt have discovered that the smell of white truffles is largely produced by soil bacteria which are trapped inside truffle fruiting bodies. White truffles from the Piedmont region in Italy can reach ...

NASA ocean data shows 'climate dance' of plankton

NASA ocean data shows climate dance of plankton
2014-09-30
The greens and blues of the ocean color from NASA satellite data have provided new insights into how climate and ecosystem processes affect the growth cycles of phytoplankton—microscopic aquatic plants important for fish populations and Earth's carbon cycle. At the bottom of the ocean's food chain, phytoplankton account for roughly half of the net photosynthesis on Earth. Their photosynthesis consumes carbon dioxide and plays a key role in transferring carbon from the atmosphere to the ocean. Unlike the plant ecosystems on land, the amount of phytoplankton in the ocean ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

These giant, prehistoric salmon had tusk-like teeth

New study infers our wellbeing by analyzing the language we use around ageing, using language markers to enable "a different type of access to individuals’ inner worlds"

New research confirms plastic production is directly linked to plastic pollution

MSU researchers uncover 'parallel universe' in tomato genetics

Grey cuckoo, red cuckoo: unveiling the genomic secrets of color polymorphism in female cuckoo birds

CHOP researchers discover underlying biology behind Fontan-associated liver disease

A flexible microdisplay can monitor brain activity in real-time during brain surgery

Diversity and productivity go branch-in-branch

Color variants in cuckoos: the advantages of rareness

Laser technology offers breakthrough in detecting illegal ivory

Why can’t robots outrun animals?

After spinal cord injury, neurons wreak havoc on metabolism

Network model unifies recency and central tendency biases

Ludwig Lausanne scientists identify and show how to target a key tumor defense against immune attack

Can climate change accelerate transmission of malaria? Pioneering research sheds light on impacts of temperature

A new attempt to identify salt gland development and salt resistance genes of Limonium bicolor ——Identification of bHLH gene family and its function analysis in salt gland development

The SAPIENS Podcast named finalist at the 16th Annual Shorty Awards

Startup financing gender gaps greater in societies where women are more empowered

Postpartum depression after adolescent stress shows a dysregulated HPA axis: a cross-species translational study

When studies conflict: building a decision-support system for clinicians

Artificial sweetener has potential to damage gut

Gene-based therapy restores cellular development and function in brain cells from people with Timothy syndrome

MD Anderson Research Highlights for April 24, 2024

Child pedestrians, self-driving vehicles: What’s the safest scenario for crossing the road?

Mount Sinai researchers the first to apply single-cell analysis to reveal mechanisms of a common complication of Crohn’s disease

Scientists unveil genetics behind development of gliding

Safety of ancestral monovalent COVID-19 vaccines in children

Reversals in the decline of heart failure mortality in the US

Recreational marijuana laws and teen marijuana use, 1993-2021

Manchester scientists found novel one-dimensional superconductor

[Press-News.org] UConn scientists discover how to beat monk parakeets at their own game
Outsmarting birds by blocking the pathway to their nests