A peacock trying to escape a predator may seem about as practical as a sprinter in a wedding gown. But suggests that a peacock鈥檚 5-foot-long train is not nearly as cumbersome as it appears.
Peacocks spend the vast majority of their time on the ground, but flight is their main defense against predators. , associate professor in muscle function and movement at the University of Leeds, wanted to find out whether their bulky trains鈥攚hich weigh in at over half a pound on average鈥攈inder their ability to get off the ground.
Using a couple of high-speed cameras to document the flight, Askew was able to create 3D models of peacocks 颅鈥攕ome with trains, some without鈥攖aking off.
鈥淔rom there, it鈥檚 relatively straightforward physics to work out the velocity of the bird and it鈥檚 acceleration,鈥 says Askew. Once he had calculated the rates, he was able to work out how much energy the peacocks put into taking off.
鈥淚f there is an effect on takeoff performance it鈥檚 subtle,鈥 Askew says. 鈥淏ut I鈥檝e only looked at one aspect of their life where there may be a cost.鈥
Simply producing these elaborate tail feathers during mating season is a considerable cost鈥攁bout 3% of a male peacock鈥檚 daily energy budget, according to Askew鈥檚 estimates. Then there鈥檚 the brilliant plumage, which draws attention from peahens and predators alike.
While natural selection favors traits that aid in survival, reproduction, or some combination of the two, sexual selection favors traits that attract mates. Beyond aiding reproduction, these traits are otherwise useless; they can even be detrimental for survival. It鈥檚 like when a guy buys a Ferrari鈥攊t鈥檚 not practical, but it shows the ladies that he has the resources to obtain and maintain an expensive car.
Even Darwin had his doubts about the sensibility of peacock feathers, leading him to , 鈥淭he sight of a feather in a peacock鈥檚 tail鈥akes me sick!鈥 About a decade later, he published his idea for .
Askew鈥檚 study shows that the peacock鈥檚 train has a negligible cost toward takeoff, but it doesn鈥檛 dispel the prevailing notion that beauty comes with a cost.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a little overhyped to say that this overturns our ideas about sexual selection,鈥 said, research chair in evolutionary biology at Queens University, who was not involved in the study. "There are several possible costs, and this is just one of them.鈥
All things considered, the peacock's train is still not a very useful appendage for survival. But in light of this research, perhaps it's better to compare it to a sprinter in a cape, rather than a wedding dress.