Please join the Linnaean Society of New York on Tuesday, December 10th, at 7 pm 
ET. The evening includes a short general membership meeting, a 45-60 minute 
lecture, and a Q&A session. 

Cheaters and Collaborators: The evolution of cooperative breeding in a tropical 
bird with Christina Riehl

Our lectures are free, open to the public, and designed to be accessible to 
all. This month’s lecture will be hosted on Zoom so you can participate from 
anywhere. 

Please register ahead of time to receive the Zoom link:  
https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/3517166818275/WN_LRH4zQCWSh6UPeh22zu8dA#/registration
Welcome! You are invited to join a webinar: LSNY Lecture Series: Cheaters and 
Collaborators: The Evolution of Cooperative Breeding in a Tropical Bird – Dr. 
Christina P. Riehl. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email 
about joining the webinar.
us02web.zoom.us


Cheaters and Collaborators: The evolution of cooperative breeding in a tropical 
bird
Cuckoos are famous for their parasitic laying habits, but not all cuckoos are 
parasites. The Greater Ani, a tropical cuckoo, nests in communal groups 
composed of several unrelated pairs. Each group builds a single nest and 
jointly provides parental care to the mixed clutch of young. Adults cannot 
recognize their own eggs or nestlings, and parental care is shared more or less 
equally by all group members. Greater Anis are long-lived and do not migrate, 
and these social groups can remain together for years – even decades. Despite 
these cooperative behaviors, females can also act as parasites, laying eggs 
into the nests of other groups and failing to provide parental care. Why, and 
how, do such groups form? Why do females sometimes act as parasites, and how do 
group members defend their nests against parasitism? Finally, how do group 
members synchronize their reproduction and coordinate parental care? In this 
talk, Christina Riehl will present findings from her long-running field project 
in Panama, which aims to understand the ecology and evolution of this unusual 
breeding system.

Christina Riehl is an Associate Professor in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology 
at Princeton University. Her research focuses on the evolution of avian life 
history and reproductive biology, especially social behavior, mating systems, 
and parental care. She is particularly interested in tropical birds, which 
exhibit a greater diversity of breeding behaviors than their temperate-zone 
counterparts and remain comparatively under-studied. Christina is a Fellow of 
the American Ornithological Society and serves as the Editor-in-Chief of the 
journal Ornithology. She received her Ph.D. from Princeton University in 2011 
and completed postdoctoral fellowships at the Smithsonian Tropical Research 
Institute and at the Harvard Society of Fellows before returning to Princeton 
as a faculty member in 2015.



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