Hi Folks,
Has anyone witnessed what appeared to be a martin sharpening its beak? Yesterday, I saw a female "sharpening" its beak on a small bamboo stick that I attach to the top of gourd racks for birds to perch. The action was just like a human sharpening a kitchen knife on a sharpening rod. After doing this, the female (I think to be ASY but not positive) went into a vacant gourd and checked it out for a few seconds, then flew off with others from the colony.
Just curious.
Beak Sharpening?
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birdman in buckhead
- Posts: 181
- Joined: Tue Jun 12, 2018 10:47 am
- Location: Small Town Buckhead, GA (not ATL Buckhead)
- Martin Colony History: 2018: 1 pair, 5 fledged
2019: 3 pairs, 10 fledged
2020: 3 pairs, 13 fledged
2021: 13 pairs, 46 fledged
2022: 22 pairs, 89 fledged
2023: 20 pairs, 85 fledged
2024: 18 pairs, 80 fledged
2025: 17 pairs, 80 fledged
GEAUX TIGERS!
Cheers!
Terry
Cheers!
Terry
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C.C.Martins
- Posts: 3368
- Joined: Fri Apr 14, 2017 11:15 am
- Location: Corpus Christi Tx
- Martin Colony History: 2016- Visitors.
2017- 5 pair. 15 fledged
2018- 18 pair. 85 fledged
2019- 17 pair. 81 fledged
2020- 25 pair. 111 fledged
2021- 28 pair. 118 fledged
2022- 33 pair. 151 fledged
2023- 33 pair. 165 fledged
2024- 40 pair. 185 fledged
2025- 40 pair. 181 fledged
HOSP:
Home colony: mix natural, super, Troyer and excluder gourds, enlarged compartment house. All SREH.
Satellite colony: Oso Bay Preserve: 49 PMCA excluder gourds; 16 room Lonestar Goliad with Modified Excluder entrances.
2019: Visitors
2020: 3 pair, 11 fledged
2021: 10 pair, 30 fledged
2022: 11 pair, 35 fledged
2023: 18 pair, 101 fledged
2024: 39 pair, 181 fledged
2025: 51 pair, 216 fledged
PMCA member
Yep, they do it all the time, its not beak sharpening though. May need to get food or whatever off, we have a green cheek conure, a cockatiel and a Caique, they all do it.
Their beaks are surprisingly sensitive, I know our own like their beaks rubbed a bit when getting scratched.
Their beaks are surprisingly sensitive, I know our own like their beaks rubbed a bit when getting scratched.
A good house sparrow is a dead house sparrow.
HOSP: 17. Starlings: 23
HOSP: 17. Starlings: 23
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Peter Huszcz
- Posts: 88
- Joined: Wed Nov 12, 2003 8:30 am
- Location: Ontario/Greely CANADA
News
Here’s Why Birds Rub Their Beaks on Stuff
There’s more to this behavior than meets the eye. Some of it meets the nose.
By Andy McGlashen
Associate Editor, Audubon Magazine
May 01, 2019
Birds in This Story
Dark-eyed Junco
Latin: Junco hyemalis
two males countersinging
European Starling
Latin: Sturnus vulgaris
song #1
Popular Stories
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How to Make Hummingbird Nectar
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House Finch or Purple Finch? Here's How to Tell Them Apart
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Bald Eagle mid-wipe. Maia Kennedy/Alamy
Bald Eagle mid-wipe. Photo: Maia Kennedy/Alamy
Download the Audubon Bird Guide App
More than 800 North American birds at your fingertips—all for free.
If you’ve spent much time observing birds—you clicked on this nerdy story, so that feels like a safe bet—you probably have noticed them wiping their bills on a tree branch or fencepost, or whatever else they’re perched on. And you might have wondered: What’s going on there?
A few things, it turns out. Bill-wiping is not the hottest topic in ornithology, but curiosity has drawn the occasional researcher to the behavior over the years. Although they haven’t arrived at a definite, universal explanation, we can summarize their reports on the role of bill-wiping this way: It definitely acts like a napkin, probably as a file, and maybe even as a cologne spritzer.
The first scientific paper to focus on the behavior, it seems, was a 1970 review by ornithologist George A. Clark, Jr. “Bill-wiping typically involves rapid withdrawal of the side of the beak from base to tip closely adjacent to a foreign surface such as a branch or the ground,” he wrote. “I have seen passerines wipe on rope clothesline, fence wire, the edge of a metal birdbath, and the rim of a metal incinerator.” While it often involves just a few swipes here and there, Clark cited one report of a finch wiping its beak 90 times in a few minutes. His research turned up more than 90 species known to engage in the activity, and he surmised that all birds do it, with the possible exceptions of hummingbirds and waterfowl. (Counterpoint: I dunno, this hummingbird sure seems to be wiping its bill.)
The napkin principle—that birds wipe their bills primarily to clean them—is generally agreed upon, based on logic and observation. “As widely noted, birds frequently bill-wipe after eating messy foods such as suet, fruits, or juicy insects,” Clark wrote. It just makes sense; you know how it is when you’re eating juicy insects. To make sure, though, researchers in the U.K. did an experiment and confirmed in a 1992 study that European Starlings wiped their bills more often after eating sticky food than dry food.
A larger goal of that study, however, was to test the file hypothesis—the idea that birds wipe their bills in part to shape them. It was prompted by a student who saw a starling wipe its bill and asked lead researcher Innes Cuthill the reason for the behavior. Cuthill didn’t know the answer, so he searched a library and found that no one had studied the question in a lab. “I reasoned it was probably like cats sharpening their claws, or rodents chewing to keep their teeth down, so that led to the experiment,” Cuthill, an ecologist at the University of Bristol, said in an email.
Like fingernails or hair, the outer portion of a bird’s beak is made of the protein keratin and grows nonstop. Foraging and feeding wears this outer layer, giving the bill its shape. Starlings and other species, Cuthill and colleagues noted, shift their diets at different times of year, eating mainly bugs and worms during breeding, but switching to lots of fruits and seeds in fall and winter. They wondered if bill-wiping might help birds hone their beaks into shapes that work best for grabbing whatever type of food they’re focused on.
Wiping had a significant impact on bill length and shape.
The answer, their findings suggest, is yes. Wiping had a significant impact on bill length and shape, they found. Birds that were assigned to smooth perches wiped their beaks more often than those with rough ones, apparently compensating for the lack of abrasion. And birds with rough perches to rub against turned out to be faster at picking up food than those with smooth ones. “This lends support to the idea that wiping frequency may be strategically adjusted to tune bill shape to current diet,” the team wrote.
Along with cleaning and honing, scientists have noticed that bill-wiping seems to happen a lot in social interactions between birds. Back in 1970, Clark’s paper characterized it in those situations as probably a “displacement activity.” That’s a term for behavior like fidgeting or head-scratching that arises unconsciously when you’re frustrated or conflicted, and it’s a concept that’s lost currency among scientists. “We don’t really accept those kinds of explanations for animal behavior anymore,” says Danielle Whittaker, an evolutionary biologist at Michigan State University. “We look to see if there’s anything functional.”
Which brings us to the cologne hypothesis. Whittaker is fascinated by smells and how they play into animal reproduction. Her research has shown that preen oil, which birds produce through a gland and use to maintain and waterproof their feathers, contains odors and chemical signals that play a role in mate choice. So when she became aware of bill-wiping, Whittaker wondered if birds might be slathering preen oil on nearby surfaces to release those smells and lure a mate.
To find out, she conducted what she calls “a fun little experiment” with Dark-eyed Juncos in Grand Teton National Park. It involved placing a caged junco—sometimes a male, sometimes a female—in the middle of a wild junco’s range, paired accordingly with a recording of a female’s come-hither trill or a male’s courtship or territorial songs. Whittaker and team videotaped the wild bird so they could count its bill-wiping, and, in 2014, reported evidence that the behavior plays a part in junco courtship. “I didn’t see it very often in response to another male,” she says, “but I did see it very reliably in response to a female.”
These findings suggest that, routine and subtle as it seems, bill-wiping may have a meaningful role in the most essential aspects of avian life. Like pretty much everything about birds, its fascination deepens the more you learn.
Here’s Why Birds Rub Their Beaks on Stuff
There’s more to this behavior than meets the eye. Some of it meets the nose.
By Andy McGlashen
Associate Editor, Audubon Magazine
May 01, 2019
Birds in This Story
Dark-eyed Junco
Latin: Junco hyemalis
two males countersinging
European Starling
Latin: Sturnus vulgaris
song #1
Popular Stories
How to Tell a Raven From a Crow
How to Make Hummingbird Nectar
Get to Know These 20 Common Birds
House Finch or Purple Finch? Here's How to Tell Them Apart
13 Fun Facts About Owls
Bald Eagle mid-wipe. Maia Kennedy/Alamy
Bald Eagle mid-wipe. Photo: Maia Kennedy/Alamy
Download the Audubon Bird Guide App
More than 800 North American birds at your fingertips—all for free.
If you’ve spent much time observing birds—you clicked on this nerdy story, so that feels like a safe bet—you probably have noticed them wiping their bills on a tree branch or fencepost, or whatever else they’re perched on. And you might have wondered: What’s going on there?
A few things, it turns out. Bill-wiping is not the hottest topic in ornithology, but curiosity has drawn the occasional researcher to the behavior over the years. Although they haven’t arrived at a definite, universal explanation, we can summarize their reports on the role of bill-wiping this way: It definitely acts like a napkin, probably as a file, and maybe even as a cologne spritzer.
The first scientific paper to focus on the behavior, it seems, was a 1970 review by ornithologist George A. Clark, Jr. “Bill-wiping typically involves rapid withdrawal of the side of the beak from base to tip closely adjacent to a foreign surface such as a branch or the ground,” he wrote. “I have seen passerines wipe on rope clothesline, fence wire, the edge of a metal birdbath, and the rim of a metal incinerator.” While it often involves just a few swipes here and there, Clark cited one report of a finch wiping its beak 90 times in a few minutes. His research turned up more than 90 species known to engage in the activity, and he surmised that all birds do it, with the possible exceptions of hummingbirds and waterfowl. (Counterpoint: I dunno, this hummingbird sure seems to be wiping its bill.)
The napkin principle—that birds wipe their bills primarily to clean them—is generally agreed upon, based on logic and observation. “As widely noted, birds frequently bill-wipe after eating messy foods such as suet, fruits, or juicy insects,” Clark wrote. It just makes sense; you know how it is when you’re eating juicy insects. To make sure, though, researchers in the U.K. did an experiment and confirmed in a 1992 study that European Starlings wiped their bills more often after eating sticky food than dry food.
A larger goal of that study, however, was to test the file hypothesis—the idea that birds wipe their bills in part to shape them. It was prompted by a student who saw a starling wipe its bill and asked lead researcher Innes Cuthill the reason for the behavior. Cuthill didn’t know the answer, so he searched a library and found that no one had studied the question in a lab. “I reasoned it was probably like cats sharpening their claws, or rodents chewing to keep their teeth down, so that led to the experiment,” Cuthill, an ecologist at the University of Bristol, said in an email.
Like fingernails or hair, the outer portion of a bird’s beak is made of the protein keratin and grows nonstop. Foraging and feeding wears this outer layer, giving the bill its shape. Starlings and other species, Cuthill and colleagues noted, shift their diets at different times of year, eating mainly bugs and worms during breeding, but switching to lots of fruits and seeds in fall and winter. They wondered if bill-wiping might help birds hone their beaks into shapes that work best for grabbing whatever type of food they’re focused on.
Wiping had a significant impact on bill length and shape.
The answer, their findings suggest, is yes. Wiping had a significant impact on bill length and shape, they found. Birds that were assigned to smooth perches wiped their beaks more often than those with rough ones, apparently compensating for the lack of abrasion. And birds with rough perches to rub against turned out to be faster at picking up food than those with smooth ones. “This lends support to the idea that wiping frequency may be strategically adjusted to tune bill shape to current diet,” the team wrote.
Along with cleaning and honing, scientists have noticed that bill-wiping seems to happen a lot in social interactions between birds. Back in 1970, Clark’s paper characterized it in those situations as probably a “displacement activity.” That’s a term for behavior like fidgeting or head-scratching that arises unconsciously when you’re frustrated or conflicted, and it’s a concept that’s lost currency among scientists. “We don’t really accept those kinds of explanations for animal behavior anymore,” says Danielle Whittaker, an evolutionary biologist at Michigan State University. “We look to see if there’s anything functional.”
Which brings us to the cologne hypothesis. Whittaker is fascinated by smells and how they play into animal reproduction. Her research has shown that preen oil, which birds produce through a gland and use to maintain and waterproof their feathers, contains odors and chemical signals that play a role in mate choice. So when she became aware of bill-wiping, Whittaker wondered if birds might be slathering preen oil on nearby surfaces to release those smells and lure a mate.
To find out, she conducted what she calls “a fun little experiment” with Dark-eyed Juncos in Grand Teton National Park. It involved placing a caged junco—sometimes a male, sometimes a female—in the middle of a wild junco’s range, paired accordingly with a recording of a female’s come-hither trill or a male’s courtship or territorial songs. Whittaker and team videotaped the wild bird so they could count its bill-wiping, and, in 2014, reported evidence that the behavior plays a part in junco courtship. “I didn’t see it very often in response to another male,” she says, “but I did see it very reliably in response to a female.”
These findings suggest that, routine and subtle as it seems, bill-wiping may have a meaningful role in the most essential aspects of avian life. Like pretty much everything about birds, its fascination deepens the more you learn.
-
Kegger
- Posts: 381
- Joined: Sun Sep 15, 2019 8:58 am
- Location: Awesome Florida
- Martin Colony History: 2020: 2 pair of SY with 4 eggs ,fledge 7
2021: 5 pair 25 eggs fledge 18, 4 egg 2nd brood attempt
2022: 13 pair 61 eggs fledge 56 added 11 cavs. now 22 total
2023 15 pair 75 eggs fledge 51 only 3 of 11 eggs hatched cavity 10
2024 11 pair 50 eggs fledge
26. 1 renest cav1, cav10 8 eggs 8 fledged 2 couples ASY and Sy
There are about 4 lumps behind the entry plate of a Troyer Horizontal which probably stop the tunnel from turning and polarize
the tunnel up during assembly. I often see ASY rub their beaks on those lumps standing behind the entry plate on top of the
tunnel.
the tunnel up during assembly. I often see ASY rub their beaks on those lumps standing behind the entry plate on top of the
tunnel.
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C.C.Martins
- Posts: 3368
- Joined: Fri Apr 14, 2017 11:15 am
- Location: Corpus Christi Tx
- Martin Colony History: 2016- Visitors.
2017- 5 pair. 15 fledged
2018- 18 pair. 85 fledged
2019- 17 pair. 81 fledged
2020- 25 pair. 111 fledged
2021- 28 pair. 118 fledged
2022- 33 pair. 151 fledged
2023- 33 pair. 165 fledged
2024- 40 pair. 185 fledged
2025- 40 pair. 181 fledged
HOSP:
Home colony: mix natural, super, Troyer and excluder gourds, enlarged compartment house. All SREH.
Satellite colony: Oso Bay Preserve: 49 PMCA excluder gourds; 16 room Lonestar Goliad with Modified Excluder entrances.
2019: Visitors
2020: 3 pair, 11 fledged
2021: 10 pair, 30 fledged
2022: 11 pair, 35 fledged
2023: 18 pair, 101 fledged
2024: 39 pair, 181 fledged
2025: 51 pair, 216 fledged
PMCA member
Peter,
That was interesting, so in some cases the birds actually are honing their beaks. In combination with marking scents. Not the first time iv been wrong, nor the last im afraid.
That was good reading, I can't wait for the martins to come in so I can see just where they rub.
Thanks,
Tom
That was interesting, so in some cases the birds actually are honing their beaks. In combination with marking scents. Not the first time iv been wrong, nor the last im afraid.
That was good reading, I can't wait for the martins to come in so I can see just where they rub.
Thanks,
Tom
A good house sparrow is a dead house sparrow.
HOSP: 17. Starlings: 23
HOSP: 17. Starlings: 23
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Martintown33
- Posts: 1366
- Joined: Tue Jun 01, 2021 6:21 pm
- Location: Laplace,La
- Martin Colony History: Colony started in 1998. 2 s&k modified houses and gourd rack
Yes, I’ve noticed this behavior for years. They always do it, when they return from feeding. Seems to me, the main purpose is cleaning bug juice off their beaks! But honing them is part of it too..
Rob
Rob
PMCA member
Laplace, La
Laplace, La
-
Archer
- Posts: 786
- Joined: Fri Mar 11, 2011 1:09 pm
- Location: Manitoba/Altona
- Martin Colony History: six pair in 2014, have grown to 52 pairs in 2017.
You know they have been feeding when they are beak wiping. I watch for this in times of bad weather, sets my mind at ease that they are catching something.
2011- first year trying, a few visitors.
2012-One ASY pair, raised two young, lots of subby visitors. So thankfull.
2013-daily subby visits.
2014-Six SY pairs
2015-18 pair, 83 fledglings
2016-36 pair, 147 fledglings
2017-52 pairs, 192 fledglings.
2018-60 pair, 246 fledglings.
2019-59 pair, 238 fledglings.
2020-62 pair.
2021-65 pair.
2022-63 pair.
2023-60 pair
2024-62 pair
2012-One ASY pair, raised two young, lots of subby visitors. So thankfull.
2013-daily subby visits.
2014-Six SY pairs
2015-18 pair, 83 fledglings
2016-36 pair, 147 fledglings
2017-52 pairs, 192 fledglings.
2018-60 pair, 246 fledglings.
2019-59 pair, 238 fledglings.
2020-62 pair.
2021-65 pair.
2022-63 pair.
2023-60 pair
2024-62 pair
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Jones4381
- Posts: 830
- Joined: Sat Apr 25, 2020 10:54 pm
- Location: Southwestern VA
- Martin Colony History: 2020- 0
2021- 1 pair-5
2022- 5 pair-20
2023 34 pair-44
2024 30 pair-122
2025 54 Pair -178
I enjoyed the last part about preen oils regarding this behavior...I agree...the desire to reproduce is the most necessary/common/appreciated of all instincts within the animal kingdom and who among us hasn't splashed/sprayed on some scent or bathed a little longer to draw favorable attention when going out to socialize or impress your better half while staying in for the evening? To be desired, noticed, overlooked, or ignored is painful or delightful depending on the result but I'd argue scent announces an animals arrival in the most attractive way of all the senses -- smell. Smart birds indeed. Really great read on something I've often ignored or haven't noticed (beak sharpening and why). I also agree with multiple purposes and sometimes we just use a napkin, beak, or a sleeve to clean off the left over food particles and their really isn't any other purpose than that ... but watch out when those preen oils are emitted as more exigent things are on the minds of the emitter.
"Be content with what you have; rejoice in the way things are. When you realize there is nothing lacking, the whole world belongs to you." - Lao Tzu
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Kegger
- Posts: 381
- Joined: Sun Sep 15, 2019 8:58 am
- Location: Awesome Florida
- Martin Colony History: 2020: 2 pair of SY with 4 eggs ,fledge 7
2021: 5 pair 25 eggs fledge 18, 4 egg 2nd brood attempt
2022: 13 pair 61 eggs fledge 56 added 11 cavs. now 22 total
2023 15 pair 75 eggs fledge 51 only 3 of 11 eggs hatched cavity 10
2024 11 pair 50 eggs fledge
26. 1 renest cav1, cav10 8 eggs 8 fledged 2 couples ASY and Sy
All of this makes perfect sense to me . Thank you for your post Peter. I just wish man would stop
screwing up what God created for us all to enjoy.
screwing up what God created for us all to enjoy.
