dc.description.abstract |
In 1968, Schreiber (1970) found that 11.3 per cent of the clutches of Western Gulls (Larus
occidentalis wymani) on San Nicolas Island had more than three eggs. He believed that the low
hatching success (0.13 per cent) of these clutches was the result of insufficient heat transfer in
incubating four or more eggs. On Santa Barbara Island in 1972, 11 per cent of clutches were
found to consist of more than three eggs, with 4 . 9 per cent hatching success (Hunt and Hunt
1973). It was believed, at first, that these eggs all came from the same female, as the eggs were
of similar color and only two adults could be identified on each territory. Between 1972 and
1976, the frequency of clutches with supernumerary eggs varied between 7 and 13 per cent. It
also became apparent that these were laid by female-female pairs.
Evidence for female-female pairing found by Hunt and Hunt (1977) is as follows:
(1) In three-egg clutches, 67 per cent of eggs were laid two days apart, whereas in the larger
clutches many were laid on consecutive days and 11 per cent on the same day. This suggests that
at least two females were laying in the same nest.
(2) Most eggs in the clutches with more than three eggs were infertile. While 81.5 percent of
the eggs of normal clutches showed development, zero to 14 per cent developed in the larger
clutches. The few eggs that were fertile resulted from promiscuous, heterosexual matings.
Indeed, marked birds have been observed mounting or being mounted by birds other than their
mate. In such situations males were off their own territory, and in five of 18 cases females were
also off their own territory.
(3) The sex of gulls trapped on nests perhaps provides the most convincing evidence. Hunt
and Hunt (1977) trapped 10 male and 15 female adult gulls incubating normal clutches (one to
three eggs), and one male and 74 females on larger clutches. Most important, on 23 nests
containing larger clutches, two females were captured.
Thus, it appears that on territories where nests contained large clutches, two females are in
attendance with no apparent permanent association of males for at least one to two weeks prior
to clutch initiation. These females essentially act as though they are heterosexually paired and
remain together from one year to the next, although in one instance a female paired to another
female in 1976 was found paired to a male in 1977. They engage in most of the usual courtship
and territorial behavior but relatively rarely show mounting and copulation behavior normally
attributable to males. If given hatching eggs, they are capable of raising young (G. Hunt, M.
Hunt, and S. Anthony, unpubl. field notes).
The existence of female-female pairs raises many questions. If the quality of a mate is
assessed in courtship, how is the mechanism failing, and how widespread and important is
Promiscuous, heterosexual mating? Why do female-female pairs form? For the last question we
have two working hypotheses, which are not mutually exclusive. These hypotheses are the
subject of this paper. |
en |