In
Leonard
Jenyns was a nineteenth century eminent zoologist and botanist, who was invited
to join the “Beagle” as naturalist but declined, suggesting in his place the
young Charles Darwin. The rest, as they
say, is history. Jenyns was a curate who
lived near
Weather
does influence when birds breed.
A
century later, David Lack a leading twentieth century ornithologist who became
Professorial Fellow of Trinity College, Oxford, working with his entomologist
colleagues in Oxford, clearly demonstrated that great tits, which feed their
chicks on woodland caterpillars, laid their eggs so that the time when they
were feeding their chicks coincided exactly with the time when the caterpillars
were most plentiful. How do the great
tits know when to start nest building, copulating, laying, and incubating, in
order to have young in the nest for the feast?
Lack suggested that it was the length of the day. The great tits that start breeding at a day
length that results in having young at the time when food is plentiful will
leave many descendants and the genes for breeding at the “right” time will be
passed on to the next generation. Those great tits that start early or late
will leave few if any descendants.
Along
with weather, the availability of food influences when birds breed and the
trigger in many cases to start breeding seems to be the length of day.