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Carotenoid pigments make extinct duck a rare bird indeed

By John Barrat

pink-headed ducks

Male and female pink-headed duck “Rhodonessa caryophyllacea” as illustrated by Henrik Grönvold from the Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society.

The pink-headed duck was no lucky duck. In 1948 a single specimen of this waterfowl, Rhodonessa caryophyllacea, was donated to the Division of Birds of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History. The following year was the last time anyone spotted one of its species—which lived in Bangladesh, Nepal, India and Myanmar—alive.

Now, despite that it is likely extinct, new research has revealed this bird was a rare duck indeed. By shining lasers on the pink head feathers of the lone Smithsonian specimen and analyzing the spectral wavelengths of reflected light, Daniel Thomas of Massey University, New Zealand, and Smithsonian ornithologist Helen James determined it is one of only two species of waterfowl known to incorporate carotenoid pigments in its plumage. Carotenoids are of special interest to scientists because the evolutionary history of their appearance in bird plumage is unresolved. A paper on their study was published recently in the journal The Auk: Ornithological Advances, with Thomas as principle author.

Carotenoid pigments originate in what a bird eats and many of the most vibrant feather colors (red, orange, yellow) are the result of carotenoids, James explains. “Some come straight into the plumage from the diet unmodified and some are modified physiologically by the bird before they go into the plumage.” Flamingoes, for example, get their pink color from the carotenoid pigments in the brine shrimp and blue-green algae they eat.

Raman spectroscopy was used on this 68-year-old specimen in the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History (top) to determine that the vivid pink plumage (close-up bottom left) of its head contains natural carotenoid pigments that came from something in its diet.

Raman spectroscopy was used on this 68-year-old specimen in the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History (top) to determine that the vivid pink plumage (close-up bottom left) of its head contains natural carotenoid pigments that came from something in its diet. (Images courtesy Smithsonian and Daniel Thomas)

“There are about 40 types of molecules classed as carotenoid pigments that have been found in bird plumage, they are very common in the songbirds, but until recently it had been thought there were none in waterfowl—ducks, swans and geese,” James adds. “Most visible colors in waterfowl plumage are a combination of melanin pigments, which are not ingested, and structural colors, which are not a pigment but just the structure of the feather.”

In 2014 James and Thomas discovered carotenoid pigments, for the first time, in the plumage of a duck: Australia’s pink-eared duck (Malacorhynchus membranaceus). This bird has tiny pink ‘ear’ spots on each side of its head. “So, we were curious about the pink-headed duck,” James says.

turn-around video of a pink-headed duck museum specimen

Click image for a turn-around video of a pink-headed duck museum specimen (Courtesy Naturalis Biodiversity Center)

The two scientists then used Raman spectroscopy to study the pigments in the pink-headed duck’s feathers because it is a process that would not damage the Smithsonian’s lone specimen. Traditional methods for identifying pigments in feathers require plucking some feathers and destroying them. During the study Raman spectra were collected from the feathers of 20 other bird species in the Natural History Museum collections to provide a comparative dataset for studying the carotenoids found in the pink-eared and pink-headed duck. Raman analysis of both pink-headed and pink-eared duck plumage suggests that the pink plumage of both birds may be colored with the same type of carotenoid pigment.

“Yet these two ducks are not close evolutionary relatives within the family tree of ducks, waterfowl and geese,” James points out. An inflated balloon-shaped bony structure or bulla in the trachea of male pink-headed ducks has fenestrae or little windows in it—a type that is only found sea ducks and diving ducks, James says. The pink-eared duck is more closely related to stiff tailed ducks. “So it appears the deposition of carotenoids into their plumage was a step that arose separately in each species.”

This coincidence has James pondering a deeper evolutionary question, she says. “Is there a metabolic pathway for putting a carotenoid from the bloodstream into a developing feather that was just turned on or turned off and it happened to be only turned on in these two species of modern Anseriformes [ducks, geese and swans]? This is not a question we can answer. It is one that interests us though.”

Just what the pink-headed duck had in its diet that contained the carotenoid pigments that made its head pink is also a question no one can answer. “Almost nothing is known about what they ate. We really have so little information.” As the duck now appears to be extinct this question may never be known.

 

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