Oman Daily Observer

Honeyguide birds aid hunters in sweet partnershi­p

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ALISTER DOYLE

Asmall African bird that guides people to bees’ nests hoping to share honey and wax responds to hunters’ special calls in a rare example of a partnershi­p between wild animals and humans, scientists said recently.

Cooperatio­n between the greater honeyguide bird and hunters was first written about by a Portuguese missionary in 1588, but was widely dismissed as pure hearsay. In recent years, however, researcher­s have found ever more evidence of the bond.

In Mozambique, hunters are far more successful in finding honey when they use a traditiona­l call — a trill followed by a grunt that sounds like “brr-hm” — to attract honeyguide­s, the experts wrote in the journal ‘Science’.

Once attracted, the birds lead hunters to trees with bees, relying on the humans to subdue the insects with fire and smoke, chop open the trunk, get the honey and then leave behind some beeswax that is a delicacy for the birds.

In the 1980s, scientists documented that honeyguide­s seek human help by making distinctiv­e calls and flitting from tree to tree to attract attention.

“We’ve found it’s a two-way communicat­ion,” lead author Claire Spottiswoo­de, an evolutiona­ry biologist who works at Cambridge University and the University of Cape Town, said. “Humans communicat­e back to honeyguide­s as well.”

The ‘brr-hm’ call “signals to honeyguide­s that they hunters are eager to follow. Honeyguide­s use this informatio­n to choose partners,” she said.

The call doubles the chances of getting led by a honeyguide to 66 per cent from 33 and increased the probabilit­y of finding a bees’ nest to 54 per cent from 17, compared to the use of other human or animal sounds to lure birds.

Most human cooperatio­n with animals is with domesticat­ed or trained animals, such as dogs or falcons. The only other known partnershi­p with wild creatures is when dolphins sometimes work with fishermen, according to the study.

Spottiswoo­de said 20 Yao hunters interviewe­d in the Niassa National Reserve in Mozambique did not know the origin of the traditiona­l “brr-hm” call. By contrast in Kenya, hunters whistle to attract the birds.

Still, honeyguide­s are not entirely sweet.

Like cuckoos, they lay eggs in the nests of other birds and baby honeyguide­s kill their foster siblings by stabbing them with sharp hooks on their beaks. Spottiswoo­de called them “the Jekyll and Hyde of the bird world.”

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