A new study published in the ornithological journal Ibis has uncovered that for the vast majority of bird species, there are more males than females. The discovery suggests that populations of many of the world’s threatened birds could therefore be overestimated, because scientists often base population estimates on counts of males. The headline above, cribbed from the BirdLife International article on this topic, may evoke images of lurid avian brothels, but the implication is that introduced predators often kill female birds when they are incubating eggs in the nest.
Recent Posts
Nine Birds Famous As IndividualsBy Kai Pflug
Demotivational Posters for Birds (XXXV)By Kai Pflug
A Cuckoo YearBy Leslie Kinrys
Ask a Bird Guide: What makes a client memorable—for good or bad reasons?By Editor
Light as a Feather: A KidLit Bird Book ReviewBy Susan Wroble
Bird Guides of the World: Djop Tabaranza, PhilippinesBy Editor
Species Spotlight: Azure-breasted PittaBy Kai Pflug
Posting Calendar
| DAY | WRITER(S) | SERIES (w) |
|---|---|---|
| MON | Kai (w) | Birding Lodges |
| TUE | Donna (m) Susan (m) Hannah (m) Fitzroy (m) Grace (m) | Bird Guides |
| WED | Leslie (bw) Faraaz (bw) | Ask a Birder/Bird Guide |
| THU | Paul (w) Cathy (bw) Kelly (m) | Birder’s Lists |
| FRI | David (w) Kendall (m) Rhea (m) | Species Spotlight |
| SAT | Peter (bw) Luca (bw) | From the Archives |
| SUN | Clive (w) Sanjana (m) Valters (m) | Three Photos |
| w weekly, bw biweekly, m monthly | ||
| Any time: Dragan, Erika, Jason, John, Mark, Rolf, Sara; Location Profiles | ||
See here for info on the writers.
Newsletter
Signup and receive notice of new posts!
Thank you!
You have successfully joined our subscriber list.







Leave a Comment