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Rusty blowjob’s Tails – [Wector]
Nicole The Lynx Blowjob Tails with Sound – [Wector/Kassioppiava]
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When birding in Tongbiguan Nature Reserve in south-west China for the first time in 2019, I came across a large and noisy bird with its outer tail feathers greatly lengthened and decorated with two rackets. The bird was a Greater Racket-tailed Drongo (Dicrurus paradiseus, Featured Image). Such an elaborate tail instantly grabbed my interest and made me wonder why some birds possess absurdly long tails. During the COVID-19 pandemic, my colleagues and I spent some time delving into the literature and putting together a review paper about the adaptive functions of avian elongated tails.
Another alternative function is anti-predation signaling. The model species for this potential function is the Turquoise-browed Motmot (Eumomota superciliosa). Many species of motmots regularly perform a pendulous movement with their long racket-shaped tails. Through predator-simulation experiments, Murphy (2006) showed that Turquoise-browed Motmots wag their tails to send pursuit-deterrent signals to predators. In other words, by tail-wagging, motmots communicate to their predators the following message: you have been detected. Don’t think about attacking me because I am well-prepared to escape. Murphy’s experiments effectively demonstrated how tail movement by motmots sends an anti-predation signal. However, they failed to explain whether tail elongation itself, not tail movement, intensifies this effect. In other words, it remains unknown whether anti-predation signaling can explain the presence of elongated tails.














