Marc Gilles

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39 Posts
PhD student interested in the smell of birds

New paper out in PeerJ! 👉 https://peerj.com/articles/17243/

Does preen oil composition differ between sexes in Kentish plovers? Nope!

No sex difference in preen oil chemical composition during incubation in Kentish plovers

Preen oil, the secretion from the uropygial gland of birds, may have a specific function in incubation. Consistent with this, during incubation, the chemical composition of preen oil is more likely to differ between sexes in species where only one sex incubates than in species where both sexes incubate. In this study, we tested the generality of this apparent difference, by investigating sex differences in the preen oil composition of a shorebird species, the Kentish plover (Anarhynchus, formerly Charadrius, alexandrinus). As both sexes incubate in this species, we predicted the absence of sex differences in preen oil composition during incubation. In the field, we sampled preen oil from nine females and 11 males during incubation, which we analysed with gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC–MS). Consistent with predictions, we found no sex difference in preen oil composition, neither in beta diversity (Bray-Curtis dissimilarities) nor in alpha diversity (Shannon index and number of substances). Based on these results, we cannot conclude whether preen oil has a function during incubation in Kentish plovers. Still, we discuss hypothetical roles, such as olfactory crypsis, protection against ectoparasites or olfactory intraspecific communication, which remain to be tested.

PeerJ

Our #metaanalysis, which only took us 5 years to complete😅 (like a good old wine!), shows that:

Indirect genetic effects seem to speed up evolution rather than slow it down as often assumed.

More at:
📜 https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.05.17.594196

New paper out in PeerJ! 👉 https://peerj.com/articles/17243/

Does preen oil composition differ between sexes in Kentish plovers? Nope!

No sex difference in preen oil chemical composition during incubation in Kentish plovers

Preen oil, the secretion from the uropygial gland of birds, may have a specific function in incubation. Consistent with this, during incubation, the chemical composition of preen oil is more likely to differ between sexes in species where only one sex incubates than in species where both sexes incubate. In this study, we tested the generality of this apparent difference, by investigating sex differences in the preen oil composition of a shorebird species, the Kentish plover (Anarhynchus, formerly Charadrius, alexandrinus). As both sexes incubate in this species, we predicted the absence of sex differences in preen oil composition during incubation. In the field, we sampled preen oil from nine females and 11 males during incubation, which we analysed with gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC–MS). Consistent with predictions, we found no sex difference in preen oil composition, neither in beta diversity (Bray-Curtis dissimilarities) nor in alpha diversity (Shannon index and number of substances). Based on these results, we cannot conclude whether preen oil has a function during incubation in Kentish plovers. Still, we discuss hypothetical roles, such as olfactory crypsis, protection against ectoparasites or olfactory intraspecific communication, which remain to be tested.

PeerJ

💥🎉🐦🎊💪🔥💃

PhD thesis printed and submitted!

We extended the deadline to submit abstracts to the special issue "Chemical Communication and Behaviour" to 𝟯𝟭 𝗠𝗮𝘆 𝟮𝟬𝟮𝟰!

We are preparing a special issue on "Chemical Communication and Behaviour"!

More information 👉 http://rb.gy/damqo

You can find me on #bluesky too!
You can find me on #bluesky too!
Talking about olfactory communication in plovers at #IWSG2023 on Sylt, Germany! #shorebirds #waders

We all had the same dataset and the same question, and came up with (relatively) different conclusions #metascience #manyanalysts Happy to have had a tiny contribution to this MASSIVE work!

Preprint: doi.org/10.32942/X2GG62