Epimeletic behaviour in airborne Common Swifts Apus apus: do adults support young in flight?

Authors

  • Olle Tenow Department of Ecology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
  • Torbjörn Fagerström
  • Lars Wallin

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.34080/os.v18.22674

Keywords:

behaviour, parental care, convergent evolution, Hirundinidae

Abstract

Seven cases of presumed epimeletic behaviour of adult Common Swifts toward flying young were recorded. The behaviour varied from adults escorting the young, over episodes when part of the colony swirled around the newcomer, to instances when an adult touched the young from below. A flying dummy was also encircled when exposed to adults. An eighth case was a non-aggressive behaviour of a migrating Swift toward a fledged soliciting House Martin. The behaviour seems to be a parallel to the care-giving (epimeletic) behaviour in cetaceans, e.g. dolphins, and is therefore seen as an airborne epimeletic behaviour. The Common Swift and dolphins have adapted to elements which are extreme to birds and mammals. If a Swift fledgling falls to the ground or a newborn dolphin (or an injured adult) sinks in the water, each will succumb. Over evolutionary time, therefore, epimeletic behaviour should have been favoured. The identical behaviour of adults of different animal taxa in different environments is here seen as behavioural convergence.

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Published

2008-04-01

How to Cite

Tenow, O., Fagerström, T., & Wallin, L. (2008). Epimeletic behaviour in airborne Common Swifts Apus apus: do adults support young in flight?. Ornis Svecica, 18(2), 96–107. https://doi.org/10.34080/os.v18.22674

Issue

Section

Research Papers