Long-Term Breeding-Pair?

briefvisit

Crowing
10 Years
Nov 9, 2013
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Tooshtoosh is now in his fourth year. We don’t know Mrs. Tooshtoosh’s age. They formed a breeding-pair last year, on the usual schedule; but they didn’t breed.

Now, normally – successful breeding – they’d break up. But they didn’t. And now we’re observing something new: a long-term breeding pair: almost a year now.

What does it all mean? Don’t know. But it’s data. I t h i n k that Eric the Emu spent more than one season with Mrs. Eric. And there’s logic in that.

Watch this space.
 
Tooshtoosh and Mrs Tooshtoosh, the pair in question, were here for breakfast: almost a year together.
The other pair -- Limpychick and Sandy -- seem to have 'broken their orbit': haven't seen them for some time.

SE
 
The Big Ballet of Emoo Life



U.S. emu owners get to enjoy their birds close up. Which I don’t.

But watching them in the wild allows you to see The Big Patterns:

any emu(s) at any time and/or place is involved in some part of The Big Ballet. It could be looking for a mate. It could be exploring new territory with a new mate. It could be ‘flocking up’ in autumn (which is also a part of looking for mates). It could be fighting to gain control of territory – to mate. It could be sitting cold and wet in roaring wind and rain to keep a clutch of eggs warm.

On one historic autumn afternoon, Supreme Emu observed more than 50 emus pass through the house-clearing.

[Drab-colored clothes, cushion, binoculars; sit very still at a vantage point.]

There were breeding-pairs. There were Dads with clutches. There were small flocks just schmoozin’ around.

Fig season is a similar time: there are breeding-pairs. There are home-team defenders. There have been mobs of a dozen to about eighteen jockeying about in the scrub behind the fig trees, hoping to get in on the action.

Just this week, on the way to town: Dad with six healthy looking black-heads following him in a raggedy gaggle. From the moment those chicks hit the road, they’ve been experiencing and memorizing territory to which they will return to all their lives – we know for certain that Eric the Emu brought five different clutches of chicks to the house-clearing here over ten years.

So this is why it’s interesting that Tooshtoosh and Mrs. have remained a pair all through the ‘off’ season.

It’s a behavior for which we have almost no data.

Another such behavior is: how often do Dads stay with their clutches for a second year? It’s a mode of behavior that definitely exists, but we very little data on it.
 

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