The Evolution of a Creationist
Marvels of Gods Creation
#2 The Incubator Bird
The Megapode or "incubator bird" of Australia is unique among birds. This three to four pound bird resembles a
chicken or a small turkey. Some native Australians call it the brush turkey.
The incubator birds are unlike all other
birds. So, if they evolved, from what did they evolve? Or what are
they evolving into? A recent Scientific American article[1]
offers precious little by way of an evolutionary explanation for the
origins of this strange bird.
All birds use body heat to incubate their eggs except the incubator bird.
"Instead, they pile up great heaps of debris which serve as incubators; the warmth
of the fermenting compost does the work. In one species, the scrub
fowl, a mound 20 feet high and 50 feet wide has been reported."[2]
Instead of using its own body heat to incubate its eggs (as does the chicken who sits on her eggs), the incubator
bird uses fermentation heat or "...some use solar heat and others
the heat produced by volcanic action."[3]
A bird that uses volcanic heat or the warmth
of fermenting plant life to hatch its eggs: Incredible! If there are
any creatures that could not possibly evolve, the Australian
incubator bird joins the bombardier beetle as such a creature.
The female is responsible for two activities.
First, she must test the nest to be sure it is adequate for
incubating her eggs. What explanation can evolution offer for the
ability of the hen to evaluate the suitability of a nest that may be
dug three feet into the ground and extend 10 or more feet above
ground and up to 50 feet across? And what would motivate a little
three and one-half pound male bird to get busy constructing
monstrous nest number two, should the hen reject his first effort?
After accepting the nest, the second
responsibility of the female is performed. She lays 20 to 35 eggs at
the rate of one egg every three days for up to seven months. "...As
many as 16 eggs can exist in a normal mound at any one time."[4]
Each egg weighs about a half a pound and is as large as an ostrich
egg. That is a tremendous amount of work for a three to four pound
hen. No wonder that upon completion of her laying task, she leaves
the nest, never to return. She takes no part in the incubation and
raising of her chicks. This is not your normal evolutionary way!
At this point the male begins to perform his
God-given job of managing the incubation of the deeply buried eggs.
For incubator bird chicks to survive they demand a precise
temperature of 91°F. Yes, exactly 91°F. If the male
bird wants the chicks to survive, he will not let the temperature
vary more then one degree on either side of 91°F!
How does the daddy bird maintain a consistent temperature of 91°F in a mound of decaying plants and dirt?
Scientists differ on the mechanism they think the bird uses to measure the temperature. Some think the bird's
thermometer is in its beak. Others believe the tongue can
distinguish 91°F and a few tenths of a percent above and below 91°F.
Here is the point: How could a bird evolve the
ability to precisely measure temperatures with its beak or tongue?
Evolution says nothing is evolved until it is needed. How would the
incubator bird know it needed the ability to keep its eggs at 91°F?
The chicks would get too hot or too cold and die before he figured
it out. And dead creatures do not evolve into higher forms.
You may be asking, "Well, how does this bird
keep those eggs at 91°F?"
The male digs down into the nest and checks the temperature. On hot
days, he may pile extra sand on top of the nest to shield it from
the sun. He may even rearrange the entire pile of rotting leaves and
grasses several times a day.
On cooler days, the male megapodes (which means big feet) will push material off the top of the nest to permit
more sunlight to penetrate the decaying organic material. Or, to
keep the humidity at 99.5% around the eggs, he may dig conical holes
toward the eggs to get more moisture deeper into the nest. Keeping
temperature and humidity just right is a big job. Concerning the
precision needed for incubation temperature maintenance, Seymour writes:
"This process is very precise: one centimeter of fresh material added to the mound
can increase core temperature about 1½ °C."[5]
Not only must the eggs be kept at 91°F
and 99.5% humidity, but the chick must get enough air to breathe.
The father provides the fresh air for the chicks as he daily digs
down to the eggs. But the chick must get the air inside the shell.
The means to get air inside the shell was provided by the hen as she
formed the shell. It has thousands of tiny holes (called pores) in
it. These holes in the thick shell are shaped like conical ice cream
cones with the narrowest part of the cone toward the chick. As the
chick grows it cannot get enough air through the bottom of the cone
so it begins to remove the inside layer of the shell. As it thins
out the shell the holes get bigger (moving up the cone) and the
chick can get more air. Amazing!
The way the chicks hatch is also unique among
birds. Unlike other birds, they are ready to fly with full feathers
as soon as they break out of the egg. Once they hatch, it takes up
to three days for them to dig their way up out of the mound. How do
they know they must dig their way out or else they die? They have
not been instructed by either parent. Even so, they lie on their
backs and dig up until they break out. Clearly, the God of the
Bible is involved with all aspects of His creation!
Once the chicks dig out of the nest, they are
on their own. They are not fed or cared for by either parent. When
they are mature, the male will build a huge nest as an incubator for
his mate's eggs. He will build this huge, precise mound without any
instruction from his parents. This is not learned behavior.! How
does the brush turkey know the importance of 91°F?
Credentialed men and women have the audacity
to say that this bird is the product of the impersonal plus time
plus chance. But truly, how could the incubator bird even exist?
Only if the God of the Bible lives and is involved with His creatures.
Footnotes:
[1] Roger S. Seymour, "The Brush Turkey," Scientific American, Vol. 265, No. 6, December, 1991, pp. 108-114.
[2] Roger Tory Petersen, Life Nature Library: The Birds (New York: Time-Life Books, 1973), p. 140.
[3] The New Encyclopedia Britannica Vol. 7 (Chicago: University of Chicago, 1990 edition), p. 1011.
[4] Ibid., Roger Seymour, p. 109.
[5] Ibid., Roger Seymour, p. 110.