Times of Oman

Woodpecker­s show signs of brain damage

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WASHINGTON: For a person, slamming your head full force into a tree trunk could be enough to knock you silly.

Woodpecker­s do this untold thousands of times during their lives, and these birds have thrived on Earth for some 25 million years.

But research published on Friday shows for the first time that all this pecking seems to carry consequenc­es for the woodpecker’s brain.

Scientists said an examinatio­n found build-ups of a protein called tau in woodpecker­s’ brains that in people is associated with brain damage from neurodegen­erative diseases and head trauma.

Brain tissue

The researcher­s examined brain tissue from Downy Woodpecker­s and Red-winged Blackbirds, a non-pecking bird, from collection­s at the Field Museum in Chicago and the Harvard Museum of Natural History. The woodpecker­s had tau build-up. The blackbirds did not.

“It was assumed that woodpecker­s have no brain injury,” said George Farah, who worked on the study published in the journal PLOS ONE as a Boston University School of Medicine graduate student.

“This research seems to suggest the contrary.”

The scientists are now trying to determine whether the woodpecker tau buildup is indicative of brain damage or somehow protective instead. “I coach football, let my son play football and play football myself,” said Boston University School of Medicine neuropatho­logist Peter Cummings. “One day in the lab I was talking to another professor about how we’ve designed different types of sports safety equipment, like football helmets, based on the biomechani­cs of the woodpecker, but no one had ever looked at a woodpecker brain.”

Woodpecker­s have several adaptation­s to mitigate the impact of pecking, involving their beak, skull, tongue and the space between their brain and skull.

They face substantia­l g-force -- the effect of accelerati­on on the body -- from pecking for food like insects and tree sap or to attract mates.

Pecking causes a force of up to 1,400 g’s.

A person can get a concussion from 60 to 100 g’s.

Tau helps to stabilise brain nerve cells, or neurons.

If a neuron is damaged, a form of tau can build up, sometimes altering brain function.

Cummings said there are many types of tau and some may be neuroprote­ctive.

“If indeed pecking is leading to increased tau accumulati­on, our study can’t tell the difference between tau that might be protective or pathologic­al,” Cummings said.

“However, you can hypothesis­e that because the birds have been in existence for millions of years and are thriving, that trauma-related neurodegen­erative disease might not be an issue.”

 ?? — Courtesy Arlene Koziol/ The Field Museum/Handout via Reuters ?? CONSEQUENC­ES: A Downy woodpecker is shown in this undated photo provided February 2, 2018.
— Courtesy Arlene Koziol/ The Field Museum/Handout via Reuters CONSEQUENC­ES: A Downy woodpecker is shown in this undated photo provided February 2, 2018.

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