Bird eggs and chicks

Is it true that if you touch and bird egg or chick while it is still in the nest, that the mom ad dad won’t come back to the nest?

Answer #1

Dont believe that, its an old folk tale, I have had many birds nest on my 20 acres and my brother had looked inside and touched the eggs before and they always came back. its bull. most birds happen to have a very poor sence of smell. so theyre ya go

Answer #2

. Birds do have olfactory nerves that vary tremendously in size and function. For most bird species, olfaction, or the sense of smell, plays little or no part in their ability to locate or assess the quality of food. Yet they all possess the capacity to smell. Because this is such a subjective sense and the birds aren’t talking, scientists have had a difficult time trying to determine which species have a well-developed sense of smell and to what extent they use it.

The species most commonly accepted to have excellent olfaction and which relies on it to locate food is the turkey vulture. Studies have shown that turkey vultures, which have very large olfactory lobes and nasal openings, could readily locate carrion, no matter how well it was hidden, if they could detect the odor. On the other hand, the similar black vulture and California condor, both also strictly carrion eaters, rely almost completely on sight to locate their food. Frequently, these latter two vulture species will follow flocks of turkey vultures to a source of food they cannot see , but which their cousins have located by their superior sense of smell.

Some of the tube-nosed procellariidae, like storm-petrels and albatrosses, seem to also have well-developed olfaction. Leach’s storm-petrels seem to be able to locate their forest nest burrows when they return to them under the cover of darkness by smelling the particular musky odor each particular nest emits. Other tubenoses seem to be able to smell the odor of oil, fat, meat or blood on the sea and will come in from miles around to feed on the slick created by such substances.

The kiwi of New Zealand is another well-known bird that seems to rely heavily on its sense of smell to locate food. Hindered by poor eyesight, the night-foraging kiwi apparently can smell the underground earthworms that make up its principal diet. Studies have shown that American robins may also be able to smell worms as they search for food. Some hawks and falcons, which naturally feed on fresh meat, have been shown to reject meat that is tainted and smells rotten.

It all seems to be another case of evolutionary necessity:”Use it or lose it!” Species that need to locate food or nest sites by smell have retained and developed the ability to do so, while the olfactory sense has diminished or disappeared entirely for species that gain no benefit from a sense of smell.

http://gorp.away.com/gorp/activity/birding/expert/exp010627.htm

Answer #3

like American Robins, are altricial and need to stay in the nest for a few weeks as they grow. However, they will often leave the nest and walk along a tree limb before they are fully able to fly. Sometimes they fall to the ground. Leave them alone. The parents will find them and feed them.

So I stand corrected.

If you happen to find a very young bird and the nest is easy to reach, it is OK to return the bird to the nest. Touching the baby bird will not make the mother abandon it because of a human scent. Most birds in your yard have a lousy sense of smell. What you should be aware of is the trail you are leaving for other predators. Your scent may very well lead snakes, raccoons, opossums and other hungry animals directly to the bird’s nest.

If you are worried about a cat hurting the baby bird, do something about the cat – not the bird!

An important law is the law of nature. Not every bird that hatches will survive. Other living things consume dead baby birds to survive. You may as well accept it. The life expectancy of a small songbird born in your yard is 10 months!

http://www.birding.com/babybird.asp

Answer #4

I have heard about that many times due that my grandparents owned a farm… but I really aint sure.. I have heard many animals do that so I don’t know maybe chicks and birds aren’t the exception.. >.<

Answer #5

Yes, most of the time, they smell a scent that may mean danger.

Answer #6

no!!!birds cant smell!! its not true

More Like This
Advisor

Pets and Animals

Pet Care, Animal Behavior, Veterinary Medicine

Ask an advisor one-on-one!
Advisor

Oregon Silkworms

Feeder Insects, Silkworms, Hornworms

Advisor

mikabirdsfarm

Pet Supplies, Exotic Birds Sales, Animal Breeding

Advisor

PawsSpree

Pet Supplies, Pet Food Delivery, Online Shopping

Advisor

Camlist

Pets, Online Shopping, Pet Accessories

Advisor

Pet Supplies Unlimited

Pet Supplies, Animal Care, Pet Professionals