World’s heaviest flying bird may be self-medicating on plants used in traditional medicine

If you see a great bustard (Otis tarda) in the wild, you’re unlikely to forget it. Massive, colorful, and impossible to mistake, they are the heaviest birds living today capable of flight, with the greatest size difference between the sexes. They are also “lek breeders,” where males gather at chosen sites to put on an audiovisual show for the visiting females, who choose a mate based on his appearance and the quality of his showbirdship.

But now, a study in Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution suggests that great bustards have another claim to our interest: they actively seek out two plants with compounds that can kill pathogens. They may thus be a rare example of a bird that uses plants against disease—that is, self-medication.

“Here we show that great bustards prefer to eat plants with with antiparasitic effects in vitro,” said Dr. Luis M Bautista-Sopelana, a staff scientist at the National Museum of Natural Sciences in Madrid, and the study’s first author.

Co-author Dr. Azucena Gonzalez-Coloma, a researcher at the Institute of Agricultural Sciences in Madrid, said, “Great bustards seek out two species of weeds that are also used by humans in traditional medicine. We show that both contain antiprotozoal and nematicidal (ie, worm-killing) compounds, while the second also contains antifungal agents.”

Humans aren’t the only species that self-medicates

Self-medication in animals is suspected to occur, with a lesser or greater degree of confidence, in animals as diverse as primates, bears, deer, elk, macaws, honeybees, and fruit flies. But it’s tricky to prove beyond doubt in wild animals, warned Bautista-Sopelana: “We can’t compare between control and experimental treatments. And double-blind trials or dose-effect studies, obligatory steps in human or veterinary medicine, are obviously impossible in wild animals.”

Great bustards, classified as Vulnerable on the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s Red List of Threatened Species, breed on grasslands from western Europe and northwest Africa to central and eastern Asia. Approximately 70% of the world’s population live in the Iberian peninsula. Females typically remain faithful to the home range where they hatched for life—10 to 15 years—while after dispersal, revisit the same lek site year after year. By staying (and importantly, pooping) in the same area for prolonged periods, they risk re-infecting themselves. And males need exceptional stamina during the mating season, which is expected to cause their immune defenses to nose-dive.

“In theory, both sexes of great bustards might benefit from seeking out medicinal plants in the mating season when sexually transmitted diseases are common—while males that use plants with compounds active against diseases might appear more healthy, vigorous, and attractive to females,” said Gonzalez-Coloma.

Some members of the present research team have studied great bustards since since the early 1980s, mainly in the regions of Madrid and Castille-Leon, Spain. They collected a total of 623 droppings from female and male great bustards, including 178 during the mating season in April. Under a microscope, they counted the abundance of recognizable remains (tissue from stems, leaves, and flowers) of 90 that grow locally and are known to on the bustards’ menu.

Plants contain compounds that kill parasites

The results showed that two species are eaten by great bustards more often than expected from their abundance: corn poppies, Papaver rhoeas and purple viper’s bugloss, Echium plantagineum.

“Great bustards select corn poppies and purple viper’s bugloss mainly in the , in April, when their energy expenditure is greatest. And males, who during these months spend much of their time and energy budgets on sexual display, prefer them more than females,” concluded Bautista-Sopelana.

Of these two species, the first is avoided by cattle and is used in traditional medicine as a pain reliever, sedative, and immune booster. The second is toxic for humans and cattle if eaten in great quantities. They also have nutritional value: fatty acids abound in corn poppy seeds, while the seeds of purple viper’s bugloss are rich in edible oils.

The authors isolated water- and fat-soluble compounds from both species and determined their chemical identity with gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) and liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (HPLC-MS). They focused on lipids, volatile essential oils, and alkaloids, produced by many plants as defense against herbivores. For example, they found that corn poppies are rich in bioactive alkaloids like rhoeadine, rhoeagenine, epiberberine, and canadine.

The authors then tested the activity of the isolated molecular fractions against three common parasites of birds: the protozoon Trichomonas gallinae, the nematode (parasitic worm) Meloidogyne javanica, and the fungus Aspergillus niger.

The results show that extracts from both plants are highly effective at inhibiting or killing protozoa and nematodes in vitro, while purple viper’s bugloss is also moderately active against fungi.

Authors still urge caution

The authors conclude that great bustards are prime candidates for birds that seek out specific plants to self-medicate. But more research is needed, they caution.

“The ultimate proof of self-medication requires experimental protocols developed in the biomedical, veterinary, and pharmacological sciences,” said Bautista-Sopelana.

“Until then, we continue with our fieldwork. For example, quantifying the prevalence of remains of corn poppies and purple viper’s bugloss and pathogens in fecal droppings across different populations of great bustards could falsify our hypothesis of self-medication in this species.”

More information: Luis M. Bautista-Sopelana et al, Bioactivity of plants eaten by wild birds against laboratory models of parasites and pathogens, Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution (2022). DOI: 10.3389/fevo.2022.1027201

Citation:World’s heaviest flying bird may be self-medicating on plants used in traditional medicine (2022, November 22)retrieved 30 November 2022from https://phys.org/news/2022-11-world-heaviest-flying-bird-self-medicating.html

This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Note: This article have been indexed to our site. We do not claim legitimacy, ownership or copyright of any of the content above. To see the article at original source Click Here

Related Posts
Environmental justice in spotlight as WH official departs thumbnail

Environmental justice in spotlight as WH official departs

The White House's top official on environmental justice is stepping down a year after President Joe Biden took office with an ambitious plan to help disadvantaged communities and overhaul policies that have historically hurt them.The departure Friday of Cecilia Martinez, senior director for environmental justice at the Council for Environmental Quality, puts a spotlight on…
Read More
Webb Team Releases Test Images of Jupiter and Its Moons thumbnail

Webb Team Releases Test Images of Jupiter and Its Moons

Several images of Jupiter and its moons as well as images and spectra of solar system asteroids from Webb’s commissioning period are now available on the Mikulski Archive for Space Telescopes. This image from Webb’s NIRCam instrument 2.12 micron filter shows Jupiter (center) and its moon Europa (left). Image credit: NASA / ESA / CSA…
Read More
ANA's A380 New Chitose Charter No. 1 Featured Articles Last Week September 19-25, 2009 thumbnail

ANA's A380 New Chitose Charter No. 1 Featured Articles Last Week September 19-25, 2009

 9月19日から25日までによく読まれた記事をまとめました。一番読まれたものは、全日本空輸(ANA/NH)のエアバスA380型機による初の成田-新千歳チャーターの記事でした。 新千歳空港に初めて夜間駐機されたANAのA380初号機(奥)=21年9月18日 PHOTO: Tadayuki YOSHIKAWA/Aviation Wire 第1位 初の新千歳夜間駐機も ANAのA380、発着異なる初チャーター終える  ANAは18日から2泊3日でA380による成田-新千歳チャーターを初開催。出発地と到着地が異なるA380のチャーターをANAが実施したのは初めてで、新千歳空港に同社がA380を夜間駐機したのも初めてでした。 第2位 ANAのA380、北海道内を遊覧飛行 新千歳発着で373人参加  第2位は、19日に実施されたANAのA380による北海道内の遊覧飛行。新千歳発着で、成田-新千歳チャーターとは別に参加者を募りました。乗客数はあと少しで380人でした。 第3位 ANA、ヤフオクにファーストクラスのシート出品 21日から入札受付  第3位は、ANAのファーストクラスモックアップなどを全日空商事が、ヤフーが運営するオークションサイト「ヤフオク!」に初出品。入札終了は26日午後9時から10時ごろを予定しています。 先週の注目記事 1. 初の新千歳夜間駐機も ANAのA380、発着異なる初チャーター終える 2. ANAのA380、北海道内を遊覧飛行 新千歳発着で373人参加 3. ANA、ヤフオクにファーストクラスのシート出品 21日から入札受付 4. 福岡空港、屋根なしバスで離着陸体感ツアー 11月に2日間 5. ANAのA380、那覇に初飛来 成田から2泊3日チャーター 6. ANA、A380で成田-新千歳チャーター初開催 2年3カ月ぶり飛来 7. ベトナム航空、成田発増便11月に後ろ倒し 関空発はエコノミー設定なし 8. JAL、羽田-パリ12月増便へ 冬ダイヤ欧州強化、北米発中部行き臨時便も 9. ロールス・ロイス、全電動航空機の初飛行成功 10. タイ国際航空、羽田-バンコク22年1月再開 787で週3往復 先週の注目記事バックナンバー鹿児島でパイロット逮捕が1位 先週の注目記事21年9月12日-18日
Read More
Engineers assessing hurricane-damaged insulation before Artemis launch Wednesday thumbnail

Engineers assessing hurricane-damaged insulation before Artemis launch Wednesday

STORY WRITTEN FOR CBS NEWS & USED WITH PERMISSION NASA’s Artemis 1 moon rocket and Orion spacecraft on Launch Complex 39B. Credit: NASA/Joel KowskyNASA managers cleared the agency’s leak-bedeviled Artemis moon rocket for the start of another countdown early Monday, but engineers must resolve questions about hurricane-damaged insulation before the huge booster can be cleared for blastoff
Read More
Gravitational waves could demonstrate that black holes do not exist but are balls of strings thumbnail

Gravitational waves could demonstrate that black holes do not exist but are balls of strings

Selon certains calculs en théorie des supercordes, les trous noirs n'existeraient pas mais à la place se formeraient des objets ayant des propriétés similaires appelés des « fuzzballs ». Ces boules diffuses de supercordes auraient des signatures particulières sous forme d'ondes gravitationnelles lors de collisions d'astres que nous pensons, à tort, être de vrais trous noirs.Depuis…
Read More
Index Of News