Young swiftlets learn to build nests using saliva by observing older birds, but success requires choosing the right location (dry, sheltered cracks) and working patiently rather than rushing, as demonstrated when a young swiftlet initially fails on exposed ledges but succeeds in a protected crack after learning from its mistakes.
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How Do Young Swifts Survive by Building Nests on Cliff Faces Using Saliva?Ajouté :
Among the towering sea cliffs, a cold and damp cave becomes home to hundreds of swiftlets. Below, powerful waves crash against the rocks.
Above, strong winds sweep through the cave entrance.
For these tiny birds, a nesting place must be more than high and hidden.
It must be safe enough to survive.
On a narrow ledge near the cave entrance, a young swiftlet is about to build the first nest of its life.
It is smaller than the others. Its uncertain movements watchful eyes.
Nearby, older swiftlets already rest inside strong nests. Firmly attached deep within the rocky wall.
Swiftlets do not build their nests with twigs, leaves, or grass. Instead, they use their own saliva, laying it down in thin layers against the stone.
An older bird works with calm precision.
Each touch of its beak adds another small piece to a strong, secure nest.
The young swiftlet tries to copy what it has seen. It chooses an open patch of rock near the cave mouth and presses its first layer of saliva onto the wall.
But the stone is too smooth and the layer is too wet. Within seconds, its very first attempt begins to slide downward. Still, the young bird does not give up. It returns and tries again.
This time, working faster, adding more and more material. But in the wild, rushing rarely leads to success.
The unfinished nest becomes too heavy before it can dry, peels away from the rock, and falls toward the sea below.
Then the ocean wind surges into the cave. Strong gusts sweep across the cliff face, carrying salty spray from the crashing waves. The young swiftlet presses its body tightly against the stone to avoid being For the first time, it begins to understand that the place it chose is far too exposed. Around it, other nests sit deep inside narrow cracks above.
There, the wind is weaker, the stone is drier. Each nest holds firmly in place.
The young swiftlet looks back at its failed spot. The problem is not only that it is inexperienced. It has also chosen the wrong place to begin.
Suddenly, a dark shape cuts across the water outside the cave. a falcon has arrived. Fast, sharp, and dangerous, it turns the peaceful colony into chaos in an instant. The swiftlets scatter from the cliff face and race deeper into the cave.
The chase fills the cave with panic.
Wings flash through the shadows as the birds dodge the predator's attack.
Terrified, the young swiftlet veers away from the open water and dives into a tiny crack in the rock.
A place it had ignored before as it seemed too small to matter, but that tiny crack is exactly what it needed.
Inside, the air is calmer, the rock is drier, and natural grooves give the saliva something to grip. The young swiftlet tries again, laying down a thin new layer. This time, it does not slide away.
Little by little, the young bird flies in and out, patiently adding one delicate layer after another. The small nest slowly takes shape inside the narrow crack. An older swiftlet passes by, slows down, and quietly watches.
There is no praise in the wild, but that silent pause feels like recognition.
Outside, the waves still crash against the cliff. The wind still blows through the cave entrance, and the falcon has disappeared into the mist.
Safely within its very first nest, a place that once seemed useless has become a perfect shelter.
In nature, survival is not only about working hard, it is also about working smart.
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