homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Why do bird eggs come in so many different shapes ? Look to the wings, biologists say

The best predictor of long or pointy eggs is a bird’s flying ability.

Tibi Puiu
June 23, 2017 @ 4:43 pm

share Share

Eggs of different shapes and sizes. The best predictor of an egg's shape is the bird's flight ability, a new study suggests. Credit: Harvard Museum of Comparative Zoology.

Eggs of different shapes and sizes. The best predictor of an egg’s shape is the bird’s flight ability, a new study suggests. Credit: Harvard Museum of Comparative Zoology.

Ask anyone on the street what an egg looks like and, after a couple awkward seconds and a bewildered look, you’d likely hear ‘oval-shaped’. Sure, that’s what a chicken egg looks like but there are 18,000 or so species of birds on this planet and the shapes bird eggs can take are far more varied than what most people are used to. You can find eggs shaped like raindrops, ping-pong balls or even Tic-Tacs.

Biologists and animal behaviorists have always been aware of this but what governs egg shape had until recently eluded science. A motley crew of evolutionary biologists, physicists and applied mathematicians from the United States seem to have cracked this stubborn egg. Their work

The researchers devised a software called the Eggxtractor which sorts and classifies eggs based on their ellipticity and asymmetry. Nearly  50,000 eggs, representing all major bird orders, were plotted using data from a database of digital images by the Museum of Vertebrate Zoology in Berkeley, California. At once, they could tell the eggs varied from spherical, to elliptical, to very pointy, to almost everything in between. But how do the eggs acquire such varied shapes?

Mary Caswell Stoddard, an assistant professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at Princeton University, and colleagues decided to look at the egg’s membrane rather the shell itself. It’s the egg’s membrane — that film you can see when peeling a boiled egg — that’s essential to an egg’s shape.

There are two main parameters which can explain an egg’s shape, the researchers learned. One’s the membrane’s composition and the other is the difference in pressure applied to the membrane before the egg hatched. By tweaking these two parameters, the team was able to recreate the entire range of avian egg shapes.

Later, Stoddard and colleagues turn to another question: why do birds lay such differently shaped eggs in the first place? They looked at various hypotheses. One suggests egg shape is influenced by the location of a nest. A cliff-nesting bird, for instance, will lay pointy eggs because these are less inclined to roll off the cliff. Another popular hypothesis is that birds lay eggs in shapes that pack together neatly in different-size clutches.

What the researchers found instead was that egg shape was most strongly correlated with the bird’s wing shape; specifically with the hand-wind index which is a measure of wing shape that reflects flight ability. It seems a bird’s aerodynamics has a net effect on the eggs it lays, as reported in the journal Science.

Very good fliers, for instance, have internal organs structured in such a way that they couldn’t handle pointy or elongated eggs. Murres are fast and powerful fliers and have asymmetric eggs, as do least sandpipers, birds which are known to migrate over very long distances. Sometime in the egg shell’s 360-million-year-old evolutionary history, nature found a way to optimize flight and egg carrying.

“Our study challenges some of the old assumptions about why eggs come in a variety of shapes,” Stoddard said. “On a global scale, across birds, we find that it’s not nest location or clutch size that predicts egg shape — it’s flight ability.

share Share

A Dutch 17-Year-Old Forgot His Native Language After Knee Surgery and Spoke Only English Even Though He Had Never Used It Outside School

He experienced foreign language syndrome for about 24 hours, and remembered every single detail of the incident even after recovery.

Your Brain Hits a Metabolic Cliff at 43. Here’s What That Means

This is when brain aging quietly kicks in.

Scientists Just Found a Hidden Battery Life Killer and the Fix Is Shockingly Simple

A simple tweak could dramatically improve the lifespan of Li-ion batteries.

Westerners cheat AI agents while Japanese treat them with respect

Japan’s robots are redefining work, care, and education — with lessons for the world.

Scientists Turn to Smelly Frogs to Fight Superbugs: How Their Slime Might Be the Key to Our Next Antibiotics

Researchers engineer synthetic antibiotics from frog slime that kill deadly bacteria without harming humans.

This Popular Zero-Calorie Sugar Substitute May Be Making You Hungrier, Not Slimmer

Zero-calorie sweeteners might confuse the brain, especially in people with obesity

Any Kind of Exercise, At Any Age, Boosts Your Brain

Even light physical activity can sharpen memory and boost mood across all ages.

A Brain Implant Just Turned a Woman’s Thoughts Into Speech in Near Real Time

This tech restores speech in real time for people who can’t talk, using only brain signals.

Using screens in bed increases insomnia risk by 59% — but social media isn’t the worst offender

Forget blue light, the real reason screens disrupt sleep may be simpler than experts thought.

We Should Start Worrying About Space Piracy. Here's Why This Could be A Big Deal

“We are arguing that it’s already started," say experts.