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Divorce in common murres (Uria aalge): relationship to parental quality
Authors:Allison T. Moody  Sabina I. Wilhelm  Maureen L. Cameron-MacMillan  Carolyn J. Walsh  Anne E. Storey
Affiliation:(1) Department of Biology, Memorial University, St. John"rsquo"s, Newfoundland, A1B 3X9, Canada;(2) Cognitive and Behavioural Ecology Graduate Programme, Memorial University, St. John"rsquo"s, Newfoundland, A1B 3X9, Canada;(3) Department of Psychology, Memorial University, St. John"rsquo"s, Newfoundland, A1B 3X9, Canada;(4) Present address: Department of Biology, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, S7N 5E, Canada
Abstract:Behavioral precursors of 12 divorces were examined in 30 color-banded pairs of common murres (Uria aalge) over six breeding seasons. Common murres are long-lived seabirds that typically return each year to the same mate and nest site in dense colonies. At least one parent is present continuously from egg lay to chick fledging. Murres, therefore, have considerable opportunities to compare their matesrsquo parental behavior with that of several familiar neighbors. Previous reproductive success was lower for divorcing birds than for reuniting pairs. As predicted by the better option hypothesis, there were clear lsquochoosersrsquo (seven females and five males) that initiated divorce by moving to a new birdrsquos site or by courting a new partner at their current site. Choosers improved their reproductive success after the divorce, whereas their previous partners, the lsquovictimsrsquo did not. Yearly divorce rates (average 8.2% per year) were significantly correlated with yearly mortality rates. Divorces appear to be opportunistic: pairs divorced after varying numbers of reproductive failures with the immediate precursor usually being the disappearance (death) of a murre from a successful neighboring site. In contrast to the delays experienced by victims, choosers formed new pairs quickly and laid their eggs no later than reuniting pairs. Prior to the divorce, victims fed their chicks less often than choosers, and some engaged in other behaviors that compromised egg or chick survival. These observations suggest that deficiencies in parental behavior were precursors to the divorce. This report is one of the first cases where reproductive failure of divorcing pairs has been linked to deficits in the parental behavior of the subsequent divorce victim.Communicated by C. Brown
Keywords:Better option  Breeding success  Common murre  Divorce  Parental behavior
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