BirdNote® Mating for Life
Air Date: February 10, 2012
Birds like to be in pairs, at least for the mating season. Michael Stein reports on why many feathered couples don’t stick around much longer than that.
Transcript
BIRD NOTE® THEME
GELLERMAN: Birds of a feather may flock together, but most bird pairs aren’t in it for the long term. BirdNote®’s Michael Stein reports that when it comes to love, birds are flighty.
CROAKING OF THE COMMON RAVEN
STEIN: Mating for life may be the human ideal, but most bird species in North America mate for a single breeding season. Some may team up with the same mate the following year just because both stay in, or return to, the same territory. But such togetherness is relatively rare.
Because most birds of the north-temperate zone migrate, remaining in touch with a mate throughout the autumn and winter is difficult. For instance, fewer than one-fifth of song sparrow pairs are reunited.
SONG SPARROW SONG
STEIN: For long-term fidelity, look among the larger birds: large resident birds such as hawks, eagles, and ravens -
COMMON RAVEN CROAKING
STEIN: have wide territories, meaning few contacts with the opposite sex. Maintaining a relationship through the winter may assure breeding in the next season. You'll often see such birds in pairs throughout the year.
CLUCKING OF RAVENS
STEIN: Most seabirds meet and breed in colonies. But marbled murrelets, little relatives of puffins, breed inland in old-growth forests. They have no chance to meet each other in a colony. So when a male and a female get together, they stay together.
MARBLED MURRELET CALLS
STEIN: In the animal realm, birds still provide the best examples of seasonal mate fidelity. Most birds form devoted pairs for at least each breeding season, not something that can be said for most mammals. For BirdNote®, I’m Michael Stein.
GELLERMAN: To see some photos of loving birds make a bee line to our website - LOE dot ORG.
