Birds in tree

Cockburn Group - Evolutionary ecology

Current work focuses on cooperative breeding of superb fairy-wrens and woodswallows.

About

Cooperative breeding occurs where more than two individuals combine to rear a single brood of young. It is extraordinarily prevalent in the Australian avifauna, for both phylogenetic and ecological reasons, and we are conducting a number of studies to understand this prevalence. Current work focuses on superb fairy-wrens and woodswallows, though we have worked with kookaburras, bee-eaters, kingfishers, thornbills, choughs and parrots.

Publications

Selected publications

All publications

Members

Group Leader

Honorary Professor

News

Shy birds stick together and gain courage through numbers, whereas bold birds go it alone according to new research.

Read the article