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Posts by Frigg Speelman
NEW on #theBOUblog from Frigg Speelman
Partners Beyond Breeding: Pair-bonded Chirruping Wedgebills spend lots of time together; but they’re closer after breeding than during breeding
bou.org.uk/blog-spee...
Based on this paper doi.org/10.1093/behe...
#ornithology 🪶
New blog post at BOU - how 'close' are pair-bonded birds truly? Read it here 👉 bou.org.uk/blog-speelma...
Based on this paper out now in Beh Ecol: doi.org/10.1093/behe...
The last data chapter of my PhD is out now! 🤩 A highly collaborative effort with Chris Tyson, @marcnaguib.bsky.social, and Simon Griffith.
Co-authored by Chris Tyson, @marcnaguib.bsky.social, and Simon Griffith
How 'inseparable' are partners? 📍🐦 Using fine-scale automated radiotracking we found that chirruping wedgebill breeding partners stick extremely close — they occupy almost identical spaces and follow each other continuously during AND after breeding. Check it out ➡️ doi.org/10.1093/behe...
🥳😇
Just got back from Ny-Ålesund, the northernmost town in the world, to catch and track Arctic terns for @seatrackscience.bsky.social in collaboration with @maartenloonen.bsky.social.
I love coming to this place, and I love the terns. They probably did not like me so much though...
A pair of chirupping wedgebills of which one is vocalising
🔊🔊 What's important in a duet? In a new paper, we tested whether duet coordination in pairs has a function in their territoriality, using fine-scale and coarse measures of duet coordination in response to playback in chirruping wedgebills.
See 👉 doi.org/10.1111/eth.... @marcnaguib.bsky.social
Based on our new paper in #ProcB: doi.org/10.1098/rspb... @hannahdugdale.bsky.social @terryburke.bsky.social
@david-s-richardson.bsky.social
Broken families can have huge effects on children, even later in life. But is that the case in species other than humans?
Read my latest article in the @aunz.theconversation.com on mate switching effects in offspring of the @seychelleswarbler.bsky.social 👇
theconversation.com/the-chicks-a...
Check out the latest paper on the dramas of Seychelles warbler family life here! 👇👇
Most Relatable Paper Title 2025?
Stewart & Kelley find in chestnut-backed antbirds that acoustic features + duet coordination correlate w/body & territory size
www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
Interesting to compare w/quoted @friggspeelman.bsky.social study
#prattle 💬
#bioacoustics
Duetting do what now?
@friggspeelman.bsky.social etc al. (incl. @marcnaguib.bsky.social) ask in chirruping wedgebills.
Authors measure response to playbacks of duets, coordinated or un-
Results do not support role for precise coordination
ecoevorxiv.org/repository/o...
#prattle 💬
#bioacoustics
1/11
New preprint out with @hannahdugdale.bsky.social, @lummaalab.bsky.social, and @erikpostma.bsky.social: www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
Why do we age? And can a “natural experiment” during the Great Finnish Famine with long-term data help provide some answers?
A lovely feature in iflscience on the causes of divorce 💔 in Seychelles warblers! 👇👇👇
www.iflscience.com/why-these-li...
This work is co-authored by @hannahdugdale.bsky.social, David Richardson, Jan Komdeur, and Terry Burke
Then, we studied divorcing using long-term data of @seychelleswarbler.bsky.social addressing all these shortcomings, and found that divorce is related to male age, pair-bond tenure, and reproductive success, but that there are no strong fitness consequences to divorce
We addressed 5 shortcomings: (1) divorcees and widows and (2) initiators and victims of divorce are not disentangled, (3) consequences of divorce and widowhood are not studied together (4) long-term consequences and (5) age-dependency of divorce are not addressed
New paper: causes and short & long-term consequences of divorcing 💔. This papers highlights the shortcomings of studying divorce to date and provides methods to address them. Plus some new insights on divorcing in birds! See 👇 doi.org/10.1111/ele....
A screenshot of a social media post from USFWSPacific that reads: "SHE DID IT AGAIN! Wisdom, the world’s oldest known wild bird, is back with a new partner and just laid yet another egg. At an approximate age of 74, the queen of seabirds returned to Midway Atoll National Wildlife Refuge last week and began interacting with a male." This tweet is paired with an image of two Laysan Albatrosses at Midway Atoll National Wildlife Refuge. Wisdom, the oldest known wild bird, is shown alongside her new partner, demonstrating her enduring legacy as a remarkable seabird.
We humbly interrupt your scroll to bring you the news that Wisdom—the world's oldest known wild bird—is breeding again, age 74.
Go on girl. 😍
🌧️💔🐦 Climate impacts on bird relationships
A new @animalecology.bsky.social study shows high & low rainfall impacts divorce rates in monogamous Seychelles warblers.
Could this signal broader ecological impacts due to #ClimateChange?
besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/...
🧪 #SciComm