13/06/2012
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Divorce in birds: she’s movin’ up, while he’s movin’ out!

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Dunlin are long-lived shorebirds that often mate with the same partner over several seasons. In 126 recorded Dunlin breeding attempts, biologists Lars-Åke Flodin and Donald Blomqvist found that 23% of the pairs divorced. They compared the breeding success of males and females before and after divorce to explore some causes and consequences of divorce. Divorcing couples did not differ from non-divorcing couples in nest success in the season preceding divorce, both in terms of total nest failure or the number of eggs in the nest.

Dunlin
Dunlin, undisclosed site, Highland (Photo: Marcus Conway — ebirder)

Non-divorcing pairs and male divorcees that paired with new partners had similar nest success in consecutive years. However, female divorcees that found new partners doubled their nest success. The authors concluded that female Dunlin divorce in order to upgrade to a better mate or territory.


Number of hatched eggs in year 1 (white) versus year 2 (grey) for females that divorced and found a new mate compared to females that did not divorce and remained with the same male.

Flodin, L.-Å. and Blomqvist, D. (2012) Divorce and breeding dispersal in the Dunlin Calidris alpina: support for the better option hypothesis? Behaviour, 149 1 pp. 67-80

Written by: Flodin & Blomqvist

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