Abandoned Seabird Eggs as a Calcium Source for Terrestrial Gastropods
Author(s) -
Alexander L. Bond,
Antony W. Diamond
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
the canadian field-naturalist
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 0008-3550
DOI - 10.22621/cfn.v121i4.521
Subject(s) - eggshell , seabird , biology , gastropoda , sterna , zoology , mollusca , calcium supplementation , tern , calcium , limpet , ecology , predation , chemistry , organic chemistry
Birds’ use of terrestrial gastropods to supplement calcium for egg formation has been well documented, but the reverse, gastropods using avian eggshells as a calcium source, has not been recorded previously. We collected Arctic Tern, Sterna paradisaea , eggs, abandoned in July 2006, that were found to have many terrestrial gastropods on the surface, and it appeared as though the outer eggshell layers were removed. Using scanning electron microscopy, we compared “grazed” and “ungrazed” sections of the same shell with eggshells collected in 2005 that were not attended by snails. It appears as though the snails removed the outer eggshell layers, presumably to supplement their own shell growth.
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