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Behavior, Society and Sex in Adolescent Birds with Liam Taylor

Photo: Burrowing owls, Jean Zuo/Audubon Photography Awards

When: February 8, 7:00 PM - 8:00 PM
Where: Virtual
Member ticket: $15
Non-member ticket:
$20

Most birds have some growing up to do before they start to breed. Despite reaching full size within weeks or months of hatching, some species will not raise offspring for years, or even decades. Liam Taylor explores the strange things that some birds need to do before they reproduce—from meeting a fishing buddy on a rocky island to finding a dance partner on a rainforest floor. Looking back through millions of years of evolution, Taylor uncovers how behavioral, social, and sexual development continues to create new challenges and opportunities for adolescent birds.

Liam Taylor is a PhD candidate in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at Yale University. He studies how social development influences, and is influenced by, the life history and evolution of birds, with a focus on delayed reproduction and delayed plumage maturation in colony-nesting seabirds and lekking manakins. 

Earlier Event: February 3
Bird Walk: Riverbend Park
Later Event: February 10
Bird Walk: Mason Neck State Park