Dictionary Definition
swiftlet n : swift of eastern Asia; produces the
edible bird's nest [syn: Collocalia
inexpectata]
Extensive Definition
Swiftlets or cave swiftlets are birds contained within the four
genera Aerodramus,
Hydrochous, Schoutedenapus and Collocalia. They form the
Collocaliini tribe
within the swift family
Apodidae.
The group contains around thirty species mostly confined to
southern Asia,
south Pacific islands,
and northeastern Australia, all
within the tropical and
subtropical regions.
They are in many respects typical members of the Apodidae, having
narrow wings for fast flight, with a wide gape and small reduced
beak surrounded by bristles for catching insects in flight. What
distinguishes many but not all species from other swifts and indeed
almost all other birds
is their ability to use a simple but effective
form of echolocation to navigate in
total darkness through the chasms and shafts of the caves where they roost at night and
breed. The nests of some species are collected for the famous
Chinese
delicacy Bird's
nest soup.
Description and ecology
The swift family remains one of the more complicated groups of birds in taxonomic research, but the swiftlet tribe is a rather well-defined group. Its internal systematics is confusing; the plumage is usually dull, with shades of black, brown, and gray; from their outward appearance, most species are very similar. Swiftlets have four toes, except the Papuan swiftlet which lacks the hallux (back toe). Their legs are very short, preventing the birds from perching, but allowing them to cling to vertical surfaces. Flight is mainly gliding due to very long primary feathers and small breast muscles. The larger Aerodramus swiftlets weigh about 14 grams and are 10 cm long.Swiftlets are insectivores; hymenopterans and dipterans being the most
abundant prey (Lourie & Tompkins, 2000). Typically, they leave
the cave during the day to forage and return to their roost at
night. Males and females look similar; as usual in such cases,
these birds are monogamous and both partners take part in caring
for the nestlings. Males perform aerial displays to attract females
and mating occurs at the nest. The breeding season overlaps the wet
season, which corresponds to an increased insect population. Clutch
size depends on the location and the food source, but it is
generally not large; Aerodramus swiftlets lay 1-2 eggs. The eggs
are a dull white color and are laid every other day. Many if not
all species are colonial nesters; some build their nests in high,
dark corners on cave walls. Swiftlets in temperate zones do migrate
but, most Aerodramus swiftlets live in the tropical Indo-Pacific
region and do not migrate. These birds usually remain in one cave
or other roosting/nesting site. Some examples of caves include the
Niah Caves at Niah National Park &
Gunung Mulu National Park which are all located in Sarawak, Malaysian Borneo.
The genus Aerodramus is of special interest due
to its use of echolocation
and their intricately constructed saliva nests which in some
species contain no other material such as feathers, moss or twigs
and are collected, selling at extremely high prices (see Bird's
nest soup). Over the past twenty years, the high demand for the
nests of some Aerodramus species has had an adverse effect on their
populations (Hobbs, 2003; Marcone, 2005).
The use of echolocation was once used to separate
Aerodramus from the non-echolocating genera Collocalia and
Hydrochous (virtually nothing is known about Schoutedenapus). But
recently, the Pygmy
Swiftlet Collocalia troglodytes was discovered making similar
clicking noises in and outside their cave (Price et al., 2004).
Characteristics of behavior, such as what materials apart from
saliva the nests contain, can be used to differentiate between
certain species of Aerodramus (Lee et al., 1996).
Echolocation
The genus, Aerodramus was thought to be the only echolocating swiftlets. These birds use echolocation to locate their roost in dark caves. Unlike a bat’s echolocation, Aerodramus swiftlets make clicking noises that are well within the human range of hearing. The clicks consist of two broad band pulses (3-10 kHz) separated by a slight pause (1-3 milliseconds). The interpulse periods (IPPs) are varied depending on the level of light; in darker situations the bird emits shorter IPPs, as obstacles become harder to see, and longer IPPs are observed when the bird nears the exit of the cave. This behavior is similar to bats as they approach targets. The birds also emit a series of low clicks followed by a call when approaching the nests; presumably to warn nearby birds out of their way. It is thought that the double clicks are used to discriminate between individual birds. Aerodramus sawtelli, the Atiu Swiftlet, and Aerodramus maximus, the Black-nest Swiftlet are the only known species which emit single clicks. The single click is thought be used to avoid voice overlap during echolocation. The use of a single click might be associated with an evolutionary shift in eastern Pacific swiftlets; determining how many clicks the Marquesan Swiftlet emits, could shed light on this. It was also discovered that both the Atiu Swiftlet (Fullard, 1993) and the Papuan Swiftlet (Price et al., 2005) emit clicks while foraging outside at dusk; the latter possibly only in these circumstances considering it might not nest in caves at all. Such behavior is not known to occur in other species (Fullard, 1993) but quite possibly goes given that the Papuan and Atiu Swiftlets are not closely related. However, it has recently been determined that the echolocation vocalizations do not agree with evolutionary relationship between swiftlet species as suggested by DNA sequence comparison (Thomassen & Povel, 2006). This suggests that as in bats, echolocation sounds, once present, adapt rapidly and independently to the particular species' acoustic environment.Three hypotheses are considered to describe how
echolocation evolved in the genus Aerodramus and, as determined
more recently, other taxa in the Apodidae. One hypothesis states
that echolocation evolved from an ancestral species of swiftlets
and was lost in the genera which lack echolocation. A second
hypothesis is that echolocation evolved independently several
times. The third scenario involves a combination of the first two,
i.e. a gain-loss-regain scenario.
Several functional subunits (like vocal muscles
and brain areals) are needed to produce the echolocating system.
Past studies have thought that the loss of one of these subunits
was more likely to occur than acquiring all the traits needed to
echolocate. But a recent study (Thomassen et al., 2005) suggests
that the echolocation subunits were mainly located in the central
nervous system, while the subunits in the vocal apparatus were
already present and capable of use before echolocation even
evolved. This study supports the second hypothesis of independent
evolution of echolocation in Aerodramus and Collocalia, with the
subsequent evolution of complex behavior needed to complement the
physical echolocation system, or even the third approach, as the
vocal apparatus-parts of the echolocation system might even be
inherited from some prehistoric nocturnal ancestor.
Culinary use
Authentic bird's nest soup is made from nests of some species of swiftlet, mainly the Edible-nest (or White-nest) swiftlet (Aerodramus fuciphagus) and the Black-nest Swiftlet. Instead of twigs, feathers and straw, these swiftlets make their nest only from strands of their gummy saliva, which harden when exposed to air. Once the nests are harvested, they are cleaned and sold to restaurants. Eating swiftlet nest material is believed to help maintain skin tone, balance qi ("life energy") and reinforce the immune system. It is also believed to strengthen the lungs and prevent coughs, improve the constitution and prolong life. The nutritional value of 100 g of dry nest includes 49.9 g of water-soluble protein (including amido nitrogen, monoamine nitrogen, non-amino nitrogen, arginine, humin, histidine, lysine and cysteine), 30.6 g carbohydrate (glycoprotein and mucin), 4.9 g iron, 2.5 g inorganic salt (including potassium, sodium, calcium, magnesium, sulfur, phosphorus, silica and other trace elements), and 1.4 g fiber (Dictionary of Traditional Chinese Medicine, The History of Chinese Medicine and the Nutrition Table).The energy contained in 100 g of
swiftlet nest is 345 kcal. The nests are
often served simmered in chicken broth.
Authentic bird's nest soup is quite popular
throughout Asia. It is also extremely expensive; many western
restaurants serve a less expensive version consisting of soup with
noodles shaped to resemble a bird's nest.
Cave ecology
Guano from both the swiftlets and the many bats that inhabit the caves supports a huge array of specialized animals that feed on the dung. There are yet other creatures that have evolved to feed on these dung eaters as well as on the bats and the swiftlets themselves, including snakes that can climb the sheer walls to snatch a passing meal and huge carnivorous crickets that prey on chicks and bat pups. This cave fauna ecosystem is self-sustaining, the only link with the outside being the birds and the bats that bring the nutrients into the caves in the first place.The Philippine
municipality of
El Nido
in Palawan,
known for its limestone cliffs and pristine beaches is home to a thriving
Bird's Nest market. The name El Nido is the
Spanish
term for literally "The Nest". Many locals still practice manual
climbing of the limestone caves to gather Swiftlet nests.
Species
The Papuan Swiftlet is apparently closer to the Waterfall Swift than to the other Aerodramus species and probably best placed in a separate genus (Price et al., 2005), whereas Thomassen et al. (2005) advocate reuniting all swiftlets in Collocalia. Schoutedenapus is one of the least-known genera of birds.- Genus Collocalia
- Glossy
Swiftlet, Collocalia esculenta
- Grey-rumped Swiftlet, Collocalia (esculenta) marginata
- Cave Swiftlet, Collocalia linchi
- Pygmy Swiftlet, Collocalia troglodytes
- Glossy
Swiftlet, Collocalia esculenta
- Genus Aerodramus
- Seychelles Swiftlet, Aerodramus elaphrus
- Mascarene Swiftlet, Aerodramus francicus
- Indian Swiftlet, Aerodramus unicolor
- Philippine Swiftlet, Aerodramus mearnsi
- Moluccan Swiftlet, Aerodramus infuscatus
- Mountain Swiftlet, Aerodramus hirundinaceus
- White-rumped Swiftlet, Aerodramus spodiopygius
- Australian Swiftlet, Aerodramus terraereginae
- Himalayan Swiftlet, Aerodramus brevirostris
- Indochinese Swiftlet, Aerodramus rogersi
- Volcano Swiftlet, Aerodramus vulcanorum
- Whitehead's Swiftlet, Aerodramus whiteheadi
- Bare-legged Swiftlet, Aerodramus nuditarsus
- Mayr's Swiftlet, Aerodramus orientalis
- Palawan Swiftlet, Aerodramus palawanensis
- Mossy-nest Swiftlet, Aerodramus salangana
- Uniform Swiftlet, Aerodramus vanikorensis
- Palau Swiftlet, Aerodramus pelewensis
- Guam Swiftlet, Aerodramus bartschi
- Caroline Islands Swiftlet, Aerodramus inquietus
- Mangaia Swiftlet, Aerodramus manuoi (prehistoric)
- Atiu Swiftlet, Aerodramus sawtelli
- Polynesian Swiftlet, Aerodramus leucophaeus
- Marquesan Swiftlet, Aerodramus ocistus
- Black-nest Swiftlet, Aerodramus maximus
- Edible-nest
Swiftlet, Aerodramus fuciphagus
- Brown-rumped Swiftlet, Aerodramus (fuciphagus) vestitus
- German's Swiftlet, Aerodramus germani
- Papuan Swiftlet, Aerodramus papuensis - probably a distinct genus
- Genus Hydrochous
- Waterfall Swift, Hydrochous gigas
- Genus Schoutedenapus
- Scarce Swift, Schoutedenapus myoptilus
- Schouteden's Swift, Schoutedenapus schoutedeni
References
- Camfield, Alaine (2004) Apodidae. Animal Diversity Web (online). Accessed August 24, 2006.
- Fullard, James H. (1993): Echolocation in Free-Flying Atiu Swiftlets (Aerodramus sawtelli). Biotropica 25: 334-339. PDF fulltext
- Gausset, Quentin (2004): Chronicle of a Foreseeable Tragedy: Birds' Nests Management in the Niah Caves (Sarawak). Human Ecology 32(4): 487-506. (HTML abstract)
- Hobbs, Joseph J. (2004): Problems in the harvest of edible birds' nests in Sarawak and Sabah, Malaysian Borneo. Biodiversity and Conservation 13(12): 2209-2226. (HTML abstract)
- Lee, Patricia L. M.; Clayton, Dale H.; Griffiths, Richard & Page, Roderic D. M. (1996): Does behavior reflect phylogeny in swiftlets (Aves: Apodidae)? A test using cytochrome b mitochondrial DNA sequences. Proc.Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 93: 7091-7096. PDF fulltext
- Lourie, S. A. & Tompkins, D. M. (2000): The diets of Malaysian swiftlets. Ibis 142(4): 596-602. HTML abstract
- Marcone, Massimo F. (2005): Characterization of the edible bird's nest the "Caviar of the East". Food Research International 38(10) :1125-1134. (HTML abstract)
- Price, Jordan J.; Johnson, Kevin, P.; Bush, Sarah H. & Clayton, Dale H. (2005): Phylogenetic relationships of the Papuan Swiftlet Aerodramus papuensis and implications for the evolution of avian echolocation. Ibis 147(4) 790-796. PDF fulltext
- Price, Jordan J.; Johnson, Kevin P. & Clayton, Dale H. (2004): The evolution of echolocation in swiftlets. Journal of Avian Biology 35(2): 135-143. PDF fulltext
- Thomassen, Henri A.; Tex, Robert-Jan; Bakker, Merijn A.G. & Povel, G. David E. (2005): Phylogenetic relationships amongst swifts and swiftlets: A multi locus approach. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 37(1): 264-277. (HTML abstract)
- Thomassen, Henri A. & Povel, G. David E. (2006): Comparative and phylogenetic analysis of the echo clicks and social vocalizations of swiftlets (Aves: Apodidae). Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 88(4): 631–643. (HTML abstract)
- Klub Peternak Walet http://forum-walet.com/forum
Footnotes
swiftlet in German: Salanganen
swiftlet in Esperanto: Apusetoj
swiftlet in French: Salangane
swiftlet in Japanese: アナツバメ
swiftlet in Swedish: Salangan
swiftlet in Vietnamese: Yến (chim)
swiftlet in Chinese: 金丝燕属