Bird Nests and Eggs Reveal More Than Meets the Eye
Learn more about the natural world with three incredible bird specimens
Douglas G. D. Russell
A bird making a nest.
Taryn Elliott
The nests and eggs of birds have fascinated us for hundreds of years. At its simplest the nest is any structure made by a bird in which eggs are laid and incubated. Yet the truth is more complicated. Nests protect eggs and young from the elements, thwart predators and help maintain the optimal environment. Ultimately, they allow birds to breed successfully in otherwise challenging environments. Below are three rare, iconic, and interesting specimens from the London’s Natural History Museum.
The bush warbler family are almost all secretive, dull plumaged birds of dense undergrowth which, as far as we know, build deep-cup, sometimes domed, nests. They are difficult to study due to their often impenetrable habitat of dense undergrowth and marshes. This bush warbler, the Rusty Thicketbird, is only found in the lowlands of the island of New Britain, Papua New Guinea and is one of the most poorly known. The collector of this extremely rare nest and two red-speckled eggs provided very limited information about it, simply indicating: ‘this brown, very rare Timaliid, builds a looseleaf nest on the ground.’ In 1880 the German naturalist Theodor Kleinschmidt was the first western scientist to collect specimens for science and his description of its habits remains one of the few published accounts:
‘Lives on the ground and runs with head projecting forwards like a Quail. When in captivity it retired at night into a bundle of grass placed in the corner of its cage on the ground to sleep. Here, suddenly expanding its long dorsal feathers, sinking its rounded wings, and drawing in its head, it looked like a loose round bundle of brown grass-stalks. Food grasshoppers. Iris bright grey, with a light-brown tinge; bill dark horn-colour above, almost black, beneath brighter; legs, feet, and claws dark horn-colour. Native name Talberara. Breeds in November and December and said to lay in a hollow in the ground without any nest.’
The true nature of its nest building was not recognized until this specimen was collected 48 years later.
Bird lovers can admire the artistry and beauty of bird nests and eggs with strikingly sharp images of more than 100 specimens. A pocket-sized gift for birders!
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