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Volume 48, No. 2

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Camera trapping reveals cooperative breeding in the Red-footed Booby Sula sula


Authors

MATTHIEU LE CORRE1*, MORGANE MANOURY1, SABINE ORLOWSKI2, FLORENT BIGNON2, GABRIELLE DICQUE1
1UMR ENTROPIE, Faculté des Sciences et Technologies, Université de la Réunion, 15 avenue René Cassin, CS 92003, 97744 Saint Denis Cédex 9, La Réunion, France
*(lecorre@univ-reunion.fr)
2TAAF, 1 rue Gabriel Dejean, 97410 Saint Pierre, La Réunion, France

Citation

LE CORRE, M., MANOURY, M., ORLOWSKI, S., BIGNON, F. & DICQUE, G. 2020. Camera trapping reveals cooperative breeding in the Red-footed Booby Sula sula. Marine Ornithology 48: 175 - 178

Received 24 April 2020, accepted 26 May 2020

Date Published: 2020/10/15
Date Online: 2020/06/29
Key words: camera trap, helping behaviour, parental care, seabird, Tromelin Island

Abstract

Cooperative breeding occurs in only 9% of bird species and is particularly rare among seabirds. We provide evidence that it occurs in a tropical seabird, the Red-footed Booby. Through camera monitoring of active nests, we found one nest in which a chick was raised by a trio of birds: its two parents and an immature bird. The immature bird fed the chick, guarded it, and preened it. The parents did not behave aggressively towards the immature bird when it approached the chick, suggesting that this trio was stable and composed of birds that knew each other. The growth of the chick cared for by the trio was not different from other chicks in the colony, suggesting that being fed by three birds did not result in more food provisioning. We hypothesize that the immature bird was the young of the pair that it was helping and had fledged the previous breeding season, and we discuss this in relation to the exceptionally long post-fledging parental care in this species. The prevalence of this behaviour is unknown and we recommend investigating parental care of boobies and gannets in greater detail to learn more about cooperative breeding among sulids.

References


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