Spectacled longbill nest
The Trustees of the Pure Historical past Museum/Jonathan Jackson
These elaborate constructions are simply a number of the birds’ nests discovered on the Pure Historical past Museum in Tring, UK, one of many oldest and largest ornithological collections on the planet, with over 1 million specimens.
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Nest of the desert cisticola
The Trustees of the Pure Historical past Museum/Jonathan Jackson
A few of these pictured are constructed primarily utilizing dry grass, like that of the spectacled longbill (essential image), the one recognized analysis specimen, and the opened-up “ball” nest of the desert cisticola (pictured above), which boasts a roof and an entrance gap sure by spider’s webs. Others, just like the brown noddy’s (beneath), are made from a mixture of supplies, together with chicken excrement and a colony of calcifying aquatic invertebrates referred to as bryozoans.
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A brown noddy nest
The Trustees of the Pure Historical past Museum/Jonathan Jackson
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Nest of the bokmakierie
The Trustees of the Pure Historical past Museum/Jonathan Jackson
The nest of the bokmakierie (pictured above) reveals the handiwork of each sexes, with its neat, open-cup design, a standard form for perching birds. The sunshine-vented bulbul’s nest (beneath), equally crafted, is essentially produced from twigs and bamboo leaves. It’s in its unique transport packaging from 1896.
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Gentle‑vented bulbul’s nest
The Trustees of the Pure Historical past Museum/Jonathan Jackson
The a number of open-cup nests (pictured beneath) are the work of many various birds, however have all been commandeered by the widespread cuckoo, which lays its eggs within the nests of greater than 100 different chicken species worldwide.
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The Trustees of the Pure Historical past Museum/Jonathan Jackson
In his new guide Fascinating Chook Nests & Eggs, wherein all these pictures seem, Douglas Russell, senior curator on the museum, delves into the historical past of a number of the specimens. “A nest is a captured piece of the environment, a moment in time,” he says. “You couldn’t ask for a more comprehensive little, tiny, feathered botanist to take up that little sample of material for you.”
New Scientist video
See contained in the Pure Historical past Museum’s uncommon chicken archive at youtube.com/newscientist
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