Robins

May 18, 2008 17:31

Robins are truly gardener's bird.  There's one in our back garden at present who is remarkably tame.   He'll come within a foot of me if I don't move too abruptly.  He's been having a field day today - I've been digging out some old hellibores to makes space for another gooseberry bush this autumn and this, of course, results in lots of freshly dug ( Read more... )

wildlife, gardening

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Comments 7

linda_joyce May 18 2008, 18:04:02 UTC
That is a very sound theory, it explains a lot.

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vjezkova May 18 2008, 19:28:29 UTC
I want a robin in my garden to explore! However there are blackbirds, Sparrows, tits and Swallows residënt, with lots of others visiting irregularly - there are 3 terracota basins with water for them.
I will try to explore the swallows ... you have inspired me!

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watervole May 18 2008, 19:45:11 UTC
'investigate' rather than 'explore'. You explore countries.

Robins explore gardens, but you investigate a robin.

I'd definitely like to know more about your swallows. We have house martins, but not swallows (though there are swallows above the allotment.)

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vjezkova May 18 2008, 19:55:04 UTC
Really? So I will investigate for you! Thanks! :-)
Swallow project!

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temeres May 19 2008, 06:09:42 UTC
This explains everything, including why it is impossible to tell male and female robins apart. There is actually only one bird per nest, reproducing by some unique variation of parthenogenisis. And if you wonder how the robin manages to impregnate itself, well, the males have always been nicknamed 'cock robin'!This is the kind of nonsense that gives ornithology a bad name. The truth is far more interesting. The term 'cock robin' is a reference to the fact that although there are indeed male and female robins, only the males are fertile. They reproduce by a process called execral androgenesis, by which the juveniles first appear as tiny buds just inside the cloacal aperture. They then migrate through the male's soft underdown and develop within a brood chamber known as the axillary pouch, where the wing meets the main body ( ... )

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watervole May 19 2008, 08:12:10 UTC
But if this were to be the case, what purpose do the females serve?

The literary reference does credit to your case, but in totality, I find it excrecable.

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temeres May 19 2008, 19:59:40 UTC
The very existence of the females was for a long time considered a mystery, perhaps even an evolutionary scandal comparable to the non-existence of males among the bdelloid rotifers. However, it turns out that the females are necessary because they hormonally induce the proper development of the axillary pouch. This was first suggested by some ingenious experiments by B S Monger and confirmed through further research by Maddie Tollup.

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