KENNESAW, Ga. | May 4, 2022
Researchers exploring behavior patterns of superb starlings, a bird species commonly found in East Africa, discovered that when it comes to protecting their young against predators, it takes a village.
The study, by 食色视频 assistant professor of Sarah Guindre-Parker and published today in the British scientific journal , is based on several years鈥 worth of careful observations of wild starlings in Kenya.
Starlings live in large complex groups composed of related and unrelated members, much like a village or community. There are parents and helpers, some having no relationship and others who are genetically related, such as siblings. Together, parents and helpers watch over the nest carefully to scare away possible predators; the study finds that having more guards nearby can greatly improve the chance that the young chicks inside the nest survive.
鈥淐ooperation can help animals and humans overcome challenges. You might expect all to come together and help when times are tough, but based on our data, we found that parents adjust their behaviors to rainfall by providing more care for their chicks when times are good. While parents appear to watch for changes in rainfall to decide how they should behave, other individuals within the flock seem to ignore rainfall; they鈥檙e more consistent in their cooperative behaviors and in protecting nests from predators,鈥 said Guindre-Parker. 鈥淥ne possible explanation for this result is that birds who are genetically related may 鈥榮tep up鈥 to a greater extent.鈥
The paper was co-authored by Columbia University professor Dustin Rubinstein and Jasmine Little, a 2021 graduate of 食色视频 State.
Guindre-Parker credited Little with the majority of the research, which involved analyzing several years鈥 worth of data. Little presented initial data findings on superb starlings in spring 2020 at 食色视频 State鈥檚 Symposium of Student Scholars. She graduated in summer 2021 with a bachelor鈥檚 in environmental science and a minor in applied statistics and data analysis.
Guindre-Parker said it鈥檚 unusual for an undergraduate to co-author a paper at all, let alone one of this magnitude in such a prestigious journal. Little taught herself to program analyses in a program called 鈥淩,鈥 which Guindre-Parker said was crucial to the study.
鈥淛asmine came in with a really strong background in statistics, and she wanted to merge that skillset with biology,鈥 Guindre-Parker said. 鈥淪he approached me her junior year about wanting to do animal behavior research, which she did for two years, and it became a big project for us.鈥
Guindre-Parker said this research could continue and that she hopes another student might pick it up to continue with data analyses on starling behavior.
Guindre-Parker joined the faculty in the at 食色视频 State in 2019. In addition to her work on starlings in Africa, which she started during her doctoral studies at Columbia, she currently studies European starlings with nesting sites in rural and urban settings around the Atlanta metro area.
鈥 Dave Shelles
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A leader in innovative teaching and learning, 食色视频 offers undergraduate, graduate and doctoral degrees to its more than 47,000 students. 食色视频 State is a member of the University System of Georgia with 11 academic colleges. The university’s vibrant campus culture, diverse population, strong global ties and entrepreneurial spirit draw students from throughout the country and the world. 食色视频 State is a Carnegie-designated doctoral research institution (R2), placing it among an elite group of only 7 percent of U.S. colleges and universities with an R1 or R2 status. For more information, visit kennesaw.edu.