Frequency: Brown-headed Cowbirds regularly perform the head-down display toward other species in the wild, and approximately 36 percent of such displays are directed by male Cowbirds toward male House Sparrows; however, Sparrows respond with homosexual mounting probably only sporadically. Similarly, homosexual courtship is in all likelihood only an occasional occurrence in Wattled Starlings. About 2–10 percent of female Wattled Starlings are transgendered, exhibiting fairly complete wattles and/or baldness. Other females appear to fall along a continuum of plumage characteristics, with some individuals showing only partial wattle development or incomplete baldness.
A male Brown-headed Cowbird in the “head-down” posture (right) inviting a male House Sparrow to mount him
Orientation: In all three of these species, not enough is yet known about the life histories of individuals participating in homosexual activity to determine their overall sexual orientation profiles. However, at least some male Wattled Starlings appear to preferentially select other males to court.
Nonreproductive and Alternative Heterosexualities
Although most heterosexual Wattled Starlings form monogamous pairs, occasionally males court and mate with females other than their mate. This may result in a female raising her young as a single parent if she is not paired to the male she mates with. The male sexual cycle is especially pronounced in this species, signaled by the seasonal development of wattles and baldness. House Sparrows often engage in multiple copulations during the same mating bout: a male may mount a female and achieve genital contact up to 30 times in rapid succession. In addition, promiscuous matings are quite common in this species: more than a quarter of all nests contain at least one chick sired by a bird other than its mother’s mate. Some of these are the result of forced matings that occur during COMMUNAL DISPLAYS, in which “gangs” of up to ten males chase a female, peck at her genitals, and try to mount her. Such displays and the associated sexual activity often take place during nonfertilizable periods as well. Courting male Cowbirds also frequently harass females, and on average only about 12 percent of heterosexual consortships in this species culminate in copulation. In pair-bonding populations of Brown-headed Cowbirds, about 16 percent of courtships are actually between birds not paired to one another, and some promiscuous matings occur as well. In both this species and House Sparrows, a few pairs switch mates during the breeding season, and a subset of birds (about 5–6 percent) are polygamous.
Large numbers of male Cowbirds are nonbreeders: more than half of all males in some populations are unpaired, and only a third of males actually copulate with females in some years. Brown-headed Cowbirds are also BROOD PARASITES, which means that females always lay their eggs in the nests of other bird species and take no part in raising their own young. Infanticide occurs in 9–12 percent of House Sparrow nests, often when a female who has lost her mate pairs with a new male (who pecks her young to death in order to father his own offspring). Females in polygamous trios also occasionally kill one another’s nestlings. Sometimes, however, a female whose mate has been replaced by an infanticidal male will stop laying eggs (by interrupting or delaying ovulation) in order not to lose any more young, and some replacement males adopt rather than kill their mate’s young.
Other Species
Male Sharp-tailed Sparrows ( Ammodramus caudacutus ), a North American species, sometimes mount other males. Adolescent male Yellow-rumped Caciques ( Cacicus cela ), a South American blackbird, frequently mount fledglings of both sexes. Sexual behavior toward these younger birds is usually part of an overall pattern of harassment, in which the adolescent males (often in groups) chase, peck, attack, and sometimes even knock fledglings from their perches (often resulting in their death by drowning if they fall into water). About 36 percent of such harassments (and the associated sexual behavior) involve same-sex interactions.
Sources
*asterisked references discuss homosexuality/transgender
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*Dean, W. R. J. (1978) “Plumage, Reproductive Condition, and Moult in Non-Breeding Wattled Starlings.” Ostrich 49:97-101.
Friedmann, H. (1929) The Cowbirds: A Study in the Biology of Social Parasitism. Springfield, Ill.: Charles C. Thomas.
*Greenlaw, J. S., and J. D. Rising (1994) “Sharp-tailed Sparrow ( Ammodramus caudacutus ).” In A. Poole and F. Gill, eds., The Birds of North America: Life Histories for the 21 st Century , no. 112. Philadelphia: Academy of Natural Sciences; Washington, D.C.: American Ornithologists’ Union.
*Griffin, D. N. (1959) “Apparent Homosexual Behavior Between Brown-headed Cowbird and House Sparrow.” Auk 76:238—39.
*Hamilton, J. B. (1959) “A Male Pattern Baldness in Wattled Starlings Resembling the Condition in Man.” Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 83:429-47.
Laskey, A. R. (1950) “Cowbird Behavior.” Wilson Bulletin 62:157-74.
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Lowther, P. E., and C. L. Cink (1992) “House Sparrow ( Passer domesticus ).” In A. Poole, P. Stettenheim, and F. Gill, eds., The Birds of North America: Life Histories for the 21 st Century , no. 12. Philadelphia: Academy of Natural Sciences; Washington, D.C.: American Ornithologists’ Union.
Møller, A. P. (1987) “House Sparrow, Passer domesticus , Communal Displays.” Animal Behavior 35:203—10.
*Robinson, S. K. (1988) “Anti-Social and Social Behavior of Adolescent Yellow-rumped Caciques (Icteri-nae: Cacicus cela ).” Animal Behavior 36:1482-95.
Rothstein, S. I. (1980) “The Preening Invitation or Head-Down Display of Parasitic Cowbirds: II. Experimental Analysis and Evidence for Behavioral Mimicry.” Behavior 75:148—84.
Rothstein, S. I., D.A. Yokel, and R. C. Fleischer (1986) “Social Dominance, Mating and Spacing Systems, Female Fecundity, and Vocal Dialects in Captive and Free-Ranging Brown-headed Cowbirds.” Current Ornithology 3:127—85.
Scott, T. W, and J. M. Grumstrup-Scott (1983) “Why Do Brown-headed Cowbirds Perform the Head-Down Display?” Auk 100:139—48.
*Selander, R. K., and C. J. La Rue, Jr. (1961) “Interspecific Preening Invitation Display of Parasitic Cowbirds.” Auk 78:473—504.
*Sontag, W.A., Jr. (1991) “Habitusunterschiede, Balzverhalten, Paarbildung, und Paarbindung beim Lap-penstar Creatophora cinerea [Behavior Differences, Courtship, Pair Formation, and Pair Bonding in the Wattled Starling].” Acta Biologica Benrodis 3:99—114.
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