Female Mountain Chickadees Cheat for Smarter Males, Study Finds in 1 Songbird Species
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jul 1
Female Mountain Chickadees Cheat for Smarter Males, Study Finds in 1 Songbird Species
1 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jul 1
Summary
A new eLife study found female mountain chickadees actively seek extra-pair matings with males that outperform their social mates on cognitive skills.
Better memory appears central to that choice: high-elevation males are known to be stronger at recalling food-cache locations, a trait critical for winter survival.
Researchers say that preference can boost reproduction because chicks sired by smarter males are more likely to survive.
Genetic work had already shown many mountain chickadee nests contain half-siblings, undercutting the long-held view that the species is strictly monogamous.