
CHOOSING between your children is not a desirable scenario under any condition, but Eclectus parrots do it all the time. When times are tough, they kill their male chicks. Outside human societies, such 鈥済endercide鈥 is rare, but paradoxically it might aid the parrots鈥 survival.
lives in Australia and on neighbouring islands. Females make nests in the hollows of trees, where they can flood in heavy rain. When this happens, mothers sometimes kill their male young while allowing the females to live, says of the Australian National University in Canberra, who carried out an eight-year survey of 42 nest hollows. 鈥淓volutionary theory tells us that this behaviour should not happen,鈥 he says. An excess of females would struggle to find mates.
Heinsohn believes he knows what drives the parrots to perform selective infanticide. Female offspring have a better chance of surviving during floods because they fledge a week earlier. So from the mother鈥檚 point of view at least, it makes sense to kill the male and save the energy required to care for it ().
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鈥淚f you鈥檙e going to kill your offspring, it鈥檚 better to do so as soon as possible,鈥 says of the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. Nature has provided a handy twist to the tale: male and female chicks are different shades of grey, making it easier to tell which is which.