Research
Cooperative Breeding
&
Sociality in Birds
Coordinators
Dr
Mandy Ridley (UCT Honorary Research Associate and
Macquarie University) Prof.
Phil Hockey (PFIAO)
Research Team
Mr Mark Anderson (BirdLife
South Africa)
Ms
Anne Braae Dr
Rita Covas (CIBIO, University of Porto and PFIAO,
University of Cape Town)
Dr Claire Doutrelant (CEFE-CNRS)
Prof. Ben Hatchwell (‘Nest building’ project; Sheffield
University)
Mr
Eric Herrmann (PFIAO)
Prof. Gerard Malan (Tshwane Univ. of Technology, SA) Ms
Kate Meares (PFIAO) Dr
Martha Nelson-Flower (PFIAO)
Dr Andrew Radford (Univ. Bristol, UK) Dr
Mandy Ridley (UCT)
Ms
Sieglinde Rode (PFIAO & Tshwane Univ.
Technology)
Mr
Adin Ross-Gillespie (PFIAO) Dr
Lizanne Roxburgh (PFIAO)
Dr Doug Schaeffer (PFIAO & Univ
California Berkeley) Dr
Robert Simmons (PFIAO)
Dr Andrew Taylor Mr
Alex Thompson (PFIAO)
Dr
René van Dijk (‘Nest building’ project; Sheffield
University)
Prof. Joseph B. Williams (Ohio State Univ., USA)
Overview
Cooperative
breeding describes a social system in which animals live
in groups, most often of closely related individuals.
Within a group, usually only the dominant pair breed,
but the other group members (subordinates/helpers)
assist in rearing the offspring, despite not being the
parents. This creates an apparent conundrum in terms of
Darwinian precepts and the search for a unifying theory
that explains the evolution of cooperative breeding
remains one of the most tantalising holy grails of
behavioural ecology. Globally, it is a rare social
system – only about 3% of the world’s birds are thought
to breed cooperatively (although most of these species
are capable, at least under some conditions, of breeding
successfully without helpers). Some of these cooperative
breeders have been the focus of intense study, often
concentrating on the extent to which helpers contribute
to group reproductive success. Results of these studies
have proved inconclusive in terms of developing a
unifying theory to explain the behaviour. In some
species, helpers are beneficial to group reproductive
performance, yet in others they seemingly confer no
benefit or may even be detrimental. The Fitztitute has
embarked on four major studies of cooperative breeding –
in Green Wood-Hoopoes Phoeniculus purpureus and
Karoo Scrub-Robins Cercotrichas coryphoeus (both
recently concluded), and Sociable Weavers Philetairus
socius and Southern Pied Babblers Turdoides
bicolor (both ongoing). The two ongoing projects
have, in the last few years, highlighted a key issue
about studies of cooperative breeding and its origins –
have we been asking the right questions in the right
way? As the scientific tool kit grows ever larger and
more sophisticated, the answer to that question
increasingly seems to be ‘perhaps not’. If the unifying
theory is within grasp, history tells us that it might
be uncovered only by modifying the search pattern. This
is something that recent research at the Fitztitute has
attempted to do by using a diversity of research
approaches.
Southern Ground Hornbill
Research and Conservation Programme
Research Team: Phil
Hockey & Kate
Meares
The Southern
Ground-Hornbill Bucorvus leadbeateri is a
conservation icon of South African savannas. During the
20th Century its range and population size in South
Africa decreased by some two thirds, with the birds
disappearing from much of their historical range. Such a
rapid decrease in the population of a long-lived,
slow-reproducing animal is of great conservation concern
and, based on IUCN criteria, the official conservation
status of Southern Ground-Hornbills in South Africa has
been elevated from Vulnerable to Critically Endangered.
In many cases, however, the drivers of local extinctions
are known, and in some instances these are no longer
operative. Because of the ground-hornbills’ complex
social structure, self-reintroduction would, at best, be
very slow. This means that reintroduction programmes are
probably imperative to improve the species’ precarious
conservation status.
Given this set of
circumstances, the Fitztitute’s Southern
Ground-Hornbill Research Programme aims to gain a
scientific understanding of the environmental conditions
which promote the survival and successful reproduction
of these birds. We will use this knowledge to identify
areas previously occupied by ground-hornbills that are
now suitable for their reintroduction. We will then
provide scientific information to guide reintroduction
programmes such that their efficiency and efficacy are
optimized. The ultimate aim of these studies of habitat
use patterns by ground-hornbills with different lifetime
reproductive outputs is therefore to optimise sites and
protocols for reintroduction programmes.
In 2000, the Institute
started monitoring groups of ground-hornbills in the
Associated Private Nature Reserves (APNR), a 180 000 ha
conservancy adjacent to Kruger National Park. The
original rationale for this study was an exploration of
social behaviour in the world’s largest cooperatively
breeding bird. However, on the basis of this 8-year data
set (from 23 groups) we were able to identify
environmental and social correlates of breeding
performance. This analysis allowed the project to enter
a strongly conservation-orientated phase. An interesting
finding was that habitat configuration strongly
influenced breeding success, demanding that we
investigate how the groups use their very large (up to
100 km2) home ranges. To do this we are using
solar-powered satellite transmitters on groups in the
APNR. We have also teamed up with the Ground-Hornbill
Reintroduction Programme based to the west of the APNR
at Mabula Game Reserve to study a habituated, but
wild-living group of ground-hornbills with the aim of
determining how much information is lost by having
satellite fixes from the APNR at hourly, rather than
shorter intervals.
Pied Babbler Research Project
Research Team:
Amanda Ridley (Team Leader), Nichola Raihani,
Martha Nelson-Flower, Krystyna Golabek, Alex
Thompson, Dave Humphries, Fiona Finch
Pied Babblers (Turdoides
bicolor) are obligate cooperative breeders that live
in groups of 3-14 adults which occupy and defend
territories year-round. The Pied Babbler Research
Project in the Kalahari focuses on the behavioural
ecology of habituated groups and on the causes and
consequences of helping behaviour, parent-offspring
conflict, kin recognition, sexual selection and vocal
communication in particular. See
Pied Babbler Research Project for more details.
Sociable Weaver Research
Project
Research
team: Rita Covas
(Team Leader),
Claire Doutrelant, René van Dijk & Ben Hatchwell
Sociable weavers
Philetairus socius are highly social passerines of
the semi-arid savannas of the Kalahari region in
southern Africa. They cooperate to build large thatched
colonies which they occupy throughout the year. They
also cooperate to raise their young, with 30-80% of
nests being attended by a group consisting of the
breeding pair and 1-5 helpers. We have a long-term study
on the sociable weavers at Benfontein Game Farm, near
Kimberley, where we investigate fascinating aspects of
the species’ cooperative behaviour, life-history and
population dynamics. Of particular interest are the
benefits and consequences of sociality and cooperation
in this species, understanding dispersal patterns and
population dynamics, and how cooperation is achieved in
colony building. More specific projects currently
ongoing are investigating maternal investment in
relation to helping and dispersal patterns, the role of
dominance and signalling in cooperative behaviour and
how the ‘tragedy of the commons’ is avoided in nest
building and maintenance. See
Sociable Weaver
Research Project for more details.
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Last modified:
2012/01/10
Copyright: Percy FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology 2011
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