DNA fingerprinting was combined with field observations over four breeding seasons to investigate the social structure and mating system of the laughing kookaburra (Dacelo novaeguineae). Groups comprised a socially dominant pair and up to six helpers of either sex. Helpers were always recruited from young hatched in the group. Territorial inheritance, which is a feature of other cooperative breeders and an oft-cited benefit of philopatry, did not occur. Helpers only attained dominant status in an established group by dispersing into a vacant dominant position in that group. However, helpers could also form new groups by excising a new territory, often through a 'budding' process. The mating system was overwhelmingly monogamous. There were n...
Considerable geographic variation often exists in behaviors of different populations of a species. O...
Guira Cuckoos (Guira guira) are cooperative breeders with joint nests, where several breeding and no...
In many socially monogamous bird species, both sexes regularly engage in mating outside their pair b...
DNA fingerprinting was combined with field observations over four breeding seasons to investigate th...
1. In co-operatively breeding birds and mammals that live in family groups, helpers may gain indirec...
In groups of the cooperatively breeding laughing kookaburra (Dacelo novaeguineae), offspring sex var...
We used DNA fingerprinting to examine reproductive skew in cooperatively breeding white-winged choug...
I studied the contributions of individuals to incubation and nestling feeding in a population of coo...
Understanding cooperative breeding requires an appreciation of the direct and indirect reproductive ...
In the first molecular study of a member of the threatened avian family, Mesitornithidae, we used ni...
Cooperative breeding is an evolutionarily curious behavior, because helpers appeared to altruistical...
Understanding how reproduction is partitioned between group members is essential in explaining the a...
I describe siblicide in the laughing kookaburra (Dacelo novaeguineae), a reverse size-dimorphic, coo...
The reason why a female who is socially paired to one particular male seeks extra-pair copulations (...
In the majority of cooperatively breeding bird species, subordinates help the dominant pair to provi...
Considerable geographic variation often exists in behaviors of different populations of a species. O...
Guira Cuckoos (Guira guira) are cooperative breeders with joint nests, where several breeding and no...
In many socially monogamous bird species, both sexes regularly engage in mating outside their pair b...
DNA fingerprinting was combined with field observations over four breeding seasons to investigate th...
1. In co-operatively breeding birds and mammals that live in family groups, helpers may gain indirec...
In groups of the cooperatively breeding laughing kookaburra (Dacelo novaeguineae), offspring sex var...
We used DNA fingerprinting to examine reproductive skew in cooperatively breeding white-winged choug...
I studied the contributions of individuals to incubation and nestling feeding in a population of coo...
Understanding cooperative breeding requires an appreciation of the direct and indirect reproductive ...
In the first molecular study of a member of the threatened avian family, Mesitornithidae, we used ni...
Cooperative breeding is an evolutionarily curious behavior, because helpers appeared to altruistical...
Understanding how reproduction is partitioned between group members is essential in explaining the a...
I describe siblicide in the laughing kookaburra (Dacelo novaeguineae), a reverse size-dimorphic, coo...
The reason why a female who is socially paired to one particular male seeks extra-pair copulations (...
In the majority of cooperatively breeding bird species, subordinates help the dominant pair to provi...
Considerable geographic variation often exists in behaviors of different populations of a species. O...
Guira Cuckoos (Guira guira) are cooperative breeders with joint nests, where several breeding and no...
In many socially monogamous bird species, both sexes regularly engage in mating outside their pair b...