To address some concerns about the expansion of genetically engineered
pharmaceutical and industrial crops to outdoor plantings and potential
impacts on the human food supply, we determined whether commercial
agriculture seeds of maize or corn Zea mays L., barley Hordeum vulgare L., safflower Carthamus tinctorius L. and rice
Oryza sativa L. are digested or pass viably through the digestive tract, or are
transported externally, by captive mallard ducks Anas platyrhynchos L., ring-necked pheasants
Phasianus colchicus L., red-winged blackbirds Agelaius phoeniceus (L.) and rock pigeons Columba livia Gmelin (with the
exception of whole maize seeds which were too large to feed to the
blackbirds). These crop seeds, whether free-fed or force-fed, did not pass
through the digestive tract of these bird species. The birds nonetheless did
retain viable seeds in the esophagus/crop and gizzard for several hours. For
example, after foraging for 6 h, mallards had retained an average of
228 ± 112 barley seeds and pheasants 192 ± 78 in the esophagus/crop,
and their germination rates were 93 and 50%, respectively. Birds
externally transported seeds away from the feeding location, but in only
four instances were seeds found attached to their muddy feet or legs and in
no case to feathers. Risk of such crop seeds germinating, establishing and
reproducing off site after transport by a bird (externally or internally) or
movement of a carcass by a predator, will depend greatly on the crop and
bird species, location, environmental conditions (including soil
characteristics), timing, and seed condition.