Article 6CQ9A Birds may ‘divorce’ because of promiscuity or long spells apart

Birds may ‘divorce’ because of promiscuity or long spells apart

by
Nicola Davis Science correspondent
from Science | The Guardian on (#6CQ9A)

Monogamous birds switch partners for reasons similar to human breakups, scientists say

Affairs or lengthy spells apart commonly spell divorce for human couples - but it seems similar factors play a role in breakups among birds.

It is thought more than 90% of bird species generally have a single mate over at least one breeding season, if not longer. However, some monogamous birds switch to a different partner for a subsequent breeding season despite their original mate remaining alive - a behaviour labelled divorce".

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