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Researchers Identify the Most Promiscuous Birds in the World

Researchers Identify the Most Promiscuous Birds in the World
A juvenile Saltmarsh Sparrow. Photos by Carina Gjerdrum

(麻豆淫院Org.com) -- UConn ornithologist Chris Elphick and his colleagues carried out DNA tests to discover the paternity of Saltmarsh Sparrow nestlings.

Saltmarsh Sparrows practically blend into the grays and browns of the marshes they inhabit along a narrow fringe of coast in Connecticut and other eastern states.

But as new research by CLAS faculty member Chris Elphick and colleagues shows, these shoreline are remarkable for their 鈥渆xtreme levels of multiple mating鈥 and are thought to be the most promiscuous birds in the world.

Elphick鈥檚 work was carried out in collaboration with Christopher E. Hill from Coastal Carolina University and Carina Gjerdrum of the Canadian Wildlife Service.
In an article in The Auk, a premier ornithological journal, the scientists describe mating patterns that give new meaning to the term 鈥渕ultiple paternity.鈥

Fifty-seven out of 60 broods had at least two chicks with different fathers.

At least 97 percent of females were mating with more than one male.

In any one nest, it was impossible to tell who the fathers were of all the chicks without checking DNA.

While most small birds have monogamous relationships, ornithologists say that low levels of 鈥渆xtra-pair mating鈥 happen in many species. Even so, the promiscuity levels seen in Saltmarsh Sparrows are extraordinarily high. Only the Greater Vasa Parrot of Madagascar and the Superb Fairy-Wren of Australia are known to come close.

The researchers didn鈥檛 set out to track the sexual habits of the sparrows. But as an offshoot of their long-term research on the birds, funded by Connecticut Sea Grant, the US Environmental Protection Agency, and the Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection, they decided to track whether reports of unusual mating patterns were true.

Elphick, an assistant professor of ecology and , and Gjerdrum, then an EEB research technician who now works for the Canadian Wildlife Service, collected data on sparrow paternity for two summers in nine marshes along the Connecticut coast.

To do their sparrow research, they catch the birds in fine mesh nets and band them. For this study, they took blood samples to test the birds鈥 DNA. Chicks in the nest were also sampled.

Chris Hill, a biologist at Coastal Carolina University, did the molecular analyses for the study.

It was easy to determine maternity of the chicks, because the mothers sit on the nests, Elphick says: 鈥淭he tricky part is the fathers.鈥

Male Saltmarsh Sparrows take no part in chick rearing, so the only way to associate a male with a brood is to catch all the males in an area and conduct paternity tests.

Easier to figure out was whether the chicks in a nest had the same father, and the DNA analyses showed how rare that was.

The Saltmarsh Sparrows face multiple habitat threats, and their conservation is the focus of Elphick鈥檚 research. They live only in a narrow fringe of coastal land from Virginia to Maine, a habitat favored by humans for development and seaside homes.

Their saltmarsh nests are flooded regularly, so many drown. As sea levels rise with global warming, the birds鈥 very existence is threatened.

But for now, they hold the world鈥檚 record for promiscuity in the bird world.

More information: An abstract of the article is available online at , where the full article is also available to subscribers. It will appear in print in April 2010.

Provided by University of Connecticut ( : )

Citation: Researchers Identify the Most Promiscuous Birds in the World (2009, December 9) retrieved 2 August 2025 from /news/2009-12-promiscuous-birds-world.html
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