Strategic Communications and Marketing News Bureau

Bird gets worm, makes history

Illinois Natural History Survey postdoctoral researcher Loren Merrill saw the grebe’s unusual behavior from the balcony of his home in Champaign, Illinois. He wrote about the observation for the Wilson Journal of Ornithology.

Illinois Natural History Survey postdoctoral researcher Loren Merrill saw the grebe’s unusual behavior from the balcony of his home in Champaign, Illinois. He wrote about the observation for the Wilson Journal of Ornithology.

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — It’s a warm April evening, and the air and earth are still heavy with moisture from recent rains. I’m perched on a plastic patio chair on my balcony when something catches my eye. I grab my binoculars and make out the details of a small bird paddling around in a new retention pond. It’s a pied-billed grebe, and it’s acting oddly.

Grebes are diving specialists and almost never venture onto land. In fact, their feet are designed to propel them underwater in pursuit of aquatic prey. Their legs are positioned so far back on their bodies that standing or walking on land is extremely difficult and very rare.

Nonetheless, this bird is cruising the pond’s edge, inspecting the gently sloping shore with great interest. I watch, perplexed. Why is it staying so close to shore? What transfixes it so?

After a few minutes of scanning, the grebe bursts out of the water onto the shore, propelling itself with its feet and scooting on its belly. About two meters from the water’s edge, it grabs something from the bare soil, turning and scooting back down the bank and into the water. Its hasty foray onto land lasts about five seconds.

In its bill is a large, writhing earthworm, about 6 inches in length. The grebe dunks the worm a few times and – I’m assuming – gulps it down.

I know what I’ve just witnessed is unusual. No one has ever recorded a grebe of any species foraging on land. I’m guessing the bird had no luck finding food in the recently constructed pond, and so turned its sights toward the bounty on land. Poor mobility on land is no obstacle when a tasty treat presents itself nearby.

And, just like that, a casual evening on my balcony yields a new natural history observation. It will soon be part of the peer-reviewed literature in the the Wilson Journal of Ornithology.  

                                                                                                                                                     

 

Subscribe to Behind the Scenes for short blog posts, photos and videos from Illinois faculty, researchers, students and staff about their work and lives. Send an email with “SUBSCRIBE BTS” in the subject line.

Read Next

Engineering Portrait of the researchers standing outside on campus.

Model tackles key obstacle to efficient plastic recycling

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Most people who separate their plastic waste for recycling assume the bulk of it will in fact be recycled. But current recycling methods, which “require sorting, grinding, cleaning, remelting and extrusion to obtain plastic pellets, usually lead to lower value materials because of contamination and mechanochemical degradation,” the authors of a new […]

Social sciences Sociology professor Brittney Miles shown in profile with a Black history mural at the Bruce D. Nesbitt African American Cultural Center on campus.in the background.

Black women’s beauty, fashion choices intertwined with Black history, politics

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Black women’s beauty and fashion are complex, meaningful acts, deliberate strategies for engaging with the world that make bold statements about identity, political resistance and empowerment, Black women said in a recent study. Researcher Brittney Miles, a sociology professor at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, interviewed 39 Black women about their fashion […]

Uncategorized Rows of MRI images from two patients with brain tumors

New MRI approach maps brain metabolism, revealing disease signatures

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — A new technology that uses clinical MRI machines to image metabolic activity in the brain could give researchers and clinicians unique insight into brain function and disease, researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign report. The non-invasive, high-resolution metabolic imaging of the whole brain revealed differences in metabolic activity and neurotransmitter levels […]

Strategic Communications and Marketing News Bureau

507 E. Green St
MC-426
Champaign, IL 61820

Email: stratcom@illinois.edu

Phone (217) 333-5010