DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Birds Are Getting Hooked on Cigarettes

March 21, 2026
in News
Birds Are Getting Hooked on Cigarettes

Nicotine, the highly addictive chemical compound in cigarettes, is having a bit of a resurgence as of late — with patches of the stuff even appearing in vending machines at tech company offices, offering overworked staffers a way to get through the day.

Even some species of birds are getting hooked on cigarettes — but not for the reason you might think. Instead of suffering from a debilitating nicotine addiction, blue tits across Europe are hoarding cigarette butts to ward off parasites using the natural and artificial toxins in tobacco and cigarette butts, as the New York Times reports. It’s a bizarre evolutionary outcome resulting from an otherwise ecologically damaging side effect of our collective smoking addiction.

As detailed in a new paper published in the journal Animal Behavior, a team of researchers at the University of Lodz in Poland suggests that volatile compounds from the cigarette remains being brought into Eurasian blue tit nests could be helping them to “avoid parasites and their effects.”

In a series of experiments, the researchers “tested whether the inclusion of cigarette butts in nests, or replacing a natural nest with a sterilized, artificial, moss and cotton wool nest on the fifth and tenth day of the nestling period,” affects the birds’ physiological health when compared to a control group.

Fascinatingly, both the inclusion of cigarette butts and the provision of sterilized nesting materials resulted in broods that “had significantly elevated hemoglobin and [red blood cell concentration], indicating improved physiological condition compared to the control group.”

Parasites, including ticks, mites, and fleas, were more common in more natural control nests that didn’t include foreign material.

Besides bringing in intact cigarette butts, Autonomous National University of Mexico ecologist Constantino Macías García told the NYT that he and his colleagues had observed finches and sparrows in Mexico City “dismember the cigarette.” The fibers inside, he suggested, may protect chicks from parasites.

Cigarette ingredients may also be capable of warding off invasive vampire flies in Darwin’s finches’ nests in the Galápagos, research has shown.

It’s a fascinating trend, with scientists finding in a 2017 study that house finch females responded to researchers placing more live ticks in their nests by placing even more cigarette butts, indicating it’s an established reaction to a heightened risk of parasitic infection among some birds.

Nonetheless, the ecological impacts of discarded cigarette butts continue to be “unignorable.” Trillions of them are discarded every year, in a flood of plastic polymers that are highly resistant to environmental degradation and which leach chemicals into the natural environment.

More on birds: Man Trains Crows to Attack MAGA Hats

The post Birds Are Getting Hooked on Cigarettes appeared first on Futurism.

Trump undermined in epic Morning Joe putdown
News

IAEA chief calls for ‘restraint’ after reported strike on Iran’s Natanz nuclear facility

by Raw Story
March 21, 2026

The head of the United Nations nuclear watchdog issued a fresh demand for restraint on Saturday after the Atomic Energy ...

Read more
News

Trump’s Contested Campus Antisemitism Fight Is Accelerating Again

March 21, 2026
News

United Airlines slashes flights as Iran war sends fuel prices soaring

March 21, 2026
News

Inside Nicholas Brendon’s troubled life after ‘Buffy’: Rehab stints, arrests, rumored co-star feuds and more

March 21, 2026
News

‘The Bachelor’ Alum Zach Shallcross and Kaity Biggar Predict the Future of the Franchise

March 21, 2026
‘Project Hail Mary’ scores big at the box office

‘Project Hail Mary’ scores big at the box office

March 21, 2026
G.O.P. Bid to Target Transgender Athletes Falls Flat in the Senate

G.O.P. Bid to Target Transgender Athletes Falls Flat in the Senate

March 21, 2026
Trump Slammed for Saying ‘I’m Glad He’s Dead’ After Robert Mueller’s Death: ‘An Embarrassment’

Trump Slammed for Saying ‘I’m Glad He’s Dead’ After Robert Mueller’s Death: ‘An Embarrassment’

March 21, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026