The second link did not work for me. Is this the news you were posting about?
http://phys.org/news/2014-08-population ... razil.htmlAlso, on the first one, I want to point out the male/female ratio both before and after they started the program - as you can see, it was many more males than females before but, once they started the program, the ratio became even. This is typical of this type of situation. The mother bird determines the gender of the baby in the egg and, when conditions are not good, they produce more males than females (because males are expendable but not females) and, once the conditions improve, the ratio is pretty much even. This is another way of judging the husbandry of a breeder, if he/she gets more males than females, you know the birds are not been kept at good conditions and, if the ratio is even, you know the husbandry is good.