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Black-nest Swiftlet

Michael Palin presents the black-nest swiftlet deep inside an Indonesian cavern

Michael Palin presents the black-nest swiftlet deep inside an Indonesian cavern. The Black-nest swiftlet landing on the cave wall, begins work on one of the most expensive and sought- after items connected with any bird; its nest.

The swiftlet's tiny bowl -shaped nest is highly-prized as the main ingredient for bird's nest soup and is built by the male from strands of his saliva which harden into a clear substance which also anchors the nest to the vertiginous walls. Black-nest swiftlets are so-called because they add dark-coloured feathers to their saliva which are then incorporated into their nests.

The nests fuel expensive appetites. A kilo of nests can fetch 2500 US dollars and worldwide the industry is worth some 5 billion US dollars a year. Today in many places in South-east Asia artificial concrete "apartment blocks" act as surrogate homes for the Black-nest swiftlets. The birds are lured in by recordings of their calls, and once they've begun nesting, the buildings are guarded as if they contained gold bullion.

Producer : Andrew Dawes

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1 minute

Last on

Thu 23 Mar 2023 05:58

Black-nest swiftlet (Aerodramus maximus)

Webpage image courtesy of D. Wechsler-Vireo / naturepl.com.

NPL Ref Β© D. Wechsler-Vireo / naturepl.com

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