Short sketches from the long history of cooperative breeding in Australian birds
Christopher R. J. Boland and Andrew Cockburn
Emu 102(1) 9 - 17
Abstract
We review the early literature and correspondence on two cooperatively
breeding Australian passerines, the Superb Fairy-wren,
Malurus cyaneus, and the White-winged Chough,
Corcorax melanorhamphos. We show that recognition of
cooperative breeding in these species was widespread in the nineteenth
century, prompting experiments and formulation of adaptive hypotheses. These
early studies precede by decades the work of Alexander Skutch, who is
generally credited with the ‘discovery’ of helping behaviour in
Central American birds. We discuss why this early literature has been ignored.
Full text doi:10.1071/MU01039
© CSIRO 2002





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