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Study says the heaviest flying bird seems to self-medicate with plants
by Doug Cunningham
Washington DC (UPI) Nov 23, 2021

The great bustard actively seeks out medicinal plants that can kill pathogens, according to a study published Wednesday in Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution.

The study published in the journal Frontiers suggests the large bird could be a rare example of birds that use plants to self-medicate.

"Here we show that great bustards prefer to eat plants with chemical compounds with anti-parasitic effects in vitro," said study first author Dr. Luis M Bautista-Sopelana, of the National Museum of Natural Sciences in Madrid.

"We show here that plants in the diet of bustards are also active against laboratory models of pathogens. We present the anti-parasitic results for two plant species as an example. Although the toxicity of P. rhoeas and E. plantagineum differs, great bustards show a marked preference for both plants during the mating season," the study said.

Results of the study also supported the view that male bustards consumed two plants because the "exertion of courtship put them under immunological stress."

According to Bautista-Sopelana, great bustards eat corn poppies and purple viper's bugloss during the mating season in April when energy expenditure of the birds is the greatest.

Male great bustards' immune systems are weakened during the mating season because of their investment in secondary sexual characters and sexual display, according to the study.

"Since April is the month when males reach the peak of display activity and most mating events occur," the study said. "We hypothesize that consumption of these two plants could help them reduce the negative effects of parasites during this important phase of their reproductive cycle."

Humans self-medicate and it is suspected in animals, but difficult to conclusively prove.

Researchers on this study say more research is needed to confirm that great bustards do in fact self-medicate by eating plants.


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Earth is currently in the midst of a mass extinction, losing thousands of species each year. New research suggests environmental changes caused the first such event in history, which occurred millions of years earlier than scientists previously realized. Most dinosaurs famously disappeared 66 million years ago at the end of the Cretaceous period. Prior to that, a majority of Earth's creatures were snuffed out between the Permian and Triassic periods, roughly 252 million years ago. Thanks to ... read more

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