• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

In New Guinea, There’s A Bird That Can Poison You With Its Feathers

January 3, 2025 by Deborah Bloomfield

When researcher and bird expert Jack Dumbacher was mist-netting in New Guinea, his team accidentally caught a lot of hooded pitohui while looking for the Raggiana bird-of-paradise. No problem, except that when they freed them, the birds gave them a nip. Without band-aids, they used the trusty old finger suck to tend to their wounds, but then, something weird started to happen.

Advertisement

The team noticed that after handling and getting bitten by the hooded pitohuis, their mouths would burn and tingle, and even go numb. Sometimes just for a few hours, sometimes long enough that their mouths were still numb come morning. When they spoke to the local guides about this, they weren’t surprised.

Advertisement

“We said ‘What do you know about these birds, they appear to be poisonous to us,’” Dumbacher explained in a video for the California Academy of Sciences, “and they said ‘Oh yeah, those are rubbish birds, they’re good for nothing. You can’t even eat those birds,’ and so we immediately started a study on the hooded pitohuis.”

Their research revealed that the birds had a kind of poison in their feathers, a poison that was getting on their hands when they touched the birds and then into their mouths when they licked the bites. It’s a steroidal alkaloid neurotoxin, and it really packs a punch.

“It can cause at first the tingling, the numbing sensation. In higher doses, it can lead to paralysis, cardiac arrest, and death. Gram for gram, it’s one of the most toxic natural substances known.”

So, how does a bird get its feathers on such a powerful substance? It all comes down to diet, as you see pitohuis eat a poison-carrying beetle that lives in New Guinea. When the birds eat the beetles, the neurotoxin accumulates in their tissues in a way that isn’t toxic to the bird, but it does affect their reptilian predators and may even prevent them from eating their eggs.

Advertisement

The beetle is Choresine pulchra, also known as the toxic “nanisani” beetle, which is the same menu item that makes the blue-capped ifrit, Ifrita kowaldi, poisonous. Studies have suggested that the Choresine beetles are potentially a direct source of batrachotoxins for New Guinea birds, which is the same way the infamous poison-dart frog gets its toxicity.

Poisonous birds aren’t limited to the passerine, either. In fact, it may alarm you to learn that the world’s largest wild goose is also poisonous. That’s something we learned from our pals over at How Many Geese, a comedy nature podcast that finally asks what we’ve all been wondering about wild animals: how many could you take in a fight?

Before you give your answer for geese, might we suggest you check out their teeth first?

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. The best PlayStation Classic prices and sales for September 2021
  2. Rebound Relationships: What They Are And Why They Can Work Better Than You Think
  3. Why Did “Steam” Appear Over the Chicago River In Freezing Temperatures?
  4. Dolce & Gabanna Launch New $108 Dog Perfume – But Should You Spritz Your Pooch?

Source Link: In New Guinea, There’s A Bird That Can Poison You With Its Feathers

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Rain At Burning Man? Prepare For The Return Of The Three-Eyed Dinosaur Shrimp
  • Supercell Storm Leaves 200-Kilometer-Long Hail Scar Across Canada’s “Hailstorm Alley”
  • “I Never Thought I’d Get To See A Blue Lobster In Person”: Meet Neptune, He’s 1-In-2-Million
  • Why Don’t Polar Bears Hibernate?
  • Anyone Born After 1939 Is Unlikely To Live To 100
  • Are Space-Made Medicines The Future? Find Out More In Issue 38 Of CURIOUS – Out Now
  • An Alien-Like Fish With A See-Through Head And Green Eyes Lurks In The Ocean’s Dark Depths
  • Africa Wants To Change Misleading World Map, The “Wow!” Signal Was Likely From An Extraterrestrial Source, And Much More This Week
  • A “Good Death”: How Do Doctors Want To Die?
  • People Are Throwing Baby Puffins Off Cliffs In Iceland Again – But Why?
  • Yet Another Ancient Human Skull Turns Out To Be Denisovan
  • Gen Z Might Not Be On Course For A Midlife Crisis – Good News, Right? Wrong
  • Glowing Plants, Punk Ankylosaur, And Has The Wow! Signal Been Solved?
  • Pulsar Fleeing A Supernova Spotted Where Neither Of Them Should Be
  • 20 Years After Hurricane Katrina: Is It Time For A New Approach To Hurricane Classification?
  • Dog Named Scribble Replicates Quantum Factorization Records – So We Tried It Too
  • How Old Is The Solar System? (And How Can We Tell?)
  • Next Week, A Record-Breaking Over 7 Billion People Will See The Total Lunar Eclipse
  • The Goblin Shark Has The Fastest Jaws In The Ocean, Firing Like A Slingshot At Speeds Of 3.1-Meters-Per-Second
  • We Thought Geological Boundaries Were Random. Now, A New Study Has Identified Hidden Patterns
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version