Seeds Across the Oceans
November 23, 2009
New York, N.Y.
How do plants get from one land mass to another? Here's one plausible answer from a man who actually performed the necessary experiments:
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Living birds can hardly fail to be highly effective agents in the
transportation of seeds. I could give many facts showing how frequently
birds of many kinds are blown by gales to vast distances across the ocean.
We may I think safely assume that under such circumstances their rate of
flight would often be 35 miles an hour; and some authors have given a far
higher estimate. I have never seen an instance of nutritious seeds passing
through the intestines of a bird; but hard seeds of fruit pass uninjured
through even the digestive organs of a turkey. In the course of two months,
I picked up in my garden 12 kinds of seeds, out of the excrement of small
birds, and these seemed perfect, and some of them, which I tried,
germinated. But the following fact is more important: the crops of
birds do not secrete gastric juice, and do not in the least injure, as I
know by trial, the germination of seeds; now after a bird has found and
devoured a large supply of food, it is positively asserted that all the
grains do not pass into the gizzard for 12 or even 18 hours. A bird in this
interval might easily be blown to the distance of 500 miles, and hawks are
known to look out for tired birds, and the contents of their torn crops
might thus readily get scattered. Mr. Brent informs me that a friend of his
had to give up flying carrier-pigeons from France to England, as the hawks
on the English coast destroyed so many on their arrival. Some hawks and
owls bolt their prey whole, and after an interval of from twelve to twenty
hours, disgorge pellets, which, as I know from experiments made in the
Zoological Gardens, include seeds capable of germination. Some seeds of the
oat, wheat, millet, canary, hemp, clover, and beet germinated after having
been from twelve to twenty-one hours in the stomachs of different birds of
prey; and two seeds of beet grew after having been thus retained for two
days and fourteen hours. Freshwater fish, I find, eat seeds of many land
and water plants: fish are frequently devoured by birds, and thus the seeds
might be transported from place to place. I forced many kinds of seeds into
the stomachs of dead fish, and then gave their bodies to fishing-eagles,
storks, and pelicans; these birds after an interval of many hours, either
rejected the seeds in pellets or passed them in their excrement; and
several of these seeds retained their power of germination. Certain seeds,
however, were always killed by this process.
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— Charles Darwin, On the Origin of Species (1859), pgs. 261-2