The Unprecedented Case of Co-Parenting Mama Owls

Such behavior had been unheard of in Great Horned Owls鈥攗ntil a live cam captured this atypical family.

When two Great Horned Owls started nesting outside Nevada鈥檚 Desert Research Institute in early March, the staff there were thrilled. They quickly contacted the state鈥檚 Department of Wildlife, and together the organizations set up a so that they鈥攁nd the rest of the world鈥攃ould check in on the owls when they weren鈥檛 in the office.

That鈥檚 when things started getting weird.

The owls, as it turned out, weren鈥檛 a mated pair like DRI and NDOW staff originally thought. They were two females, nesting side by side, and they had what appeared to be the same male mate. Great Horned Owl males for bringing all food to the nest in the early stages of egg and chick rearing, and the webcam showed the male coming to visit and feeding both females each night.

The females鈥 comraderie didn鈥檛 stop there, however. When the larger of the two female鈥檚 eggs failed to hatch, she hopped across the rock that separated the two nests and started helping the smaller owl care for her eggs. When the eggs hatched, the larger female stuck around, helping the smaller feed the chicks. One chick has since left the nest, but the other remains, and the second mom still swings by to help out. 

This behavior in Great Horned Owls, says David Catalano, supervising wildlife biologist for NDOW. 鈥淚鈥檝e been trying to find literature on it,鈥 he says. 鈥淎nd there鈥檚 just nothing. There鈥檚 nothing on this.鈥

There are other cases of birds鈥攎ale and female鈥攆eeding nestlings that aren鈥檛 their own. The practice is called alloparenting, or cooperative breeding, and it can be beneficial for all involved. 

The practice is called alloparenting, or cooperative breeding.

鈥淪ometimes alloparents are siblings of the nestling, or aunts or uncles,鈥 Christina Riehl, assistant professor at Princeton who studies cooperative breeding in birds, said in an email.  鈥淲hen the alloparent is related to the young, they share common genes, so the alloparent is helping to raise its genetic relatives (just like a grandparent or an uncle taking care of their younger family members).鈥

For example, Greater Anis, members of the cuckoo family,  that they share with up to four breeding pairs, a group setup that  for choice nesting spots. The adults work together to incubate the eggs and raise the chicks, with female anis caring for their own young and the young of other females. Sociable Weavers build massive nests composed of many small 鈥渁partments鈥 for mated pairs, and often, after the offspring fledge, they  and help their parents feed their younger siblings.

But when birds engage in alloparenting of offspring that aren鈥檛 related to them and without any evolutionary benefit, it鈥檚 known as misdirected parenting, and it can be harmful for the birds鈥 own eggs or chicks. It can happen among birds of the same species or birds of , and it isn鈥檛 unheard of among owls: Barn Owl fledglings, for instance, have  to abandon their own nests and move to nearby nests, where they鈥檙e fed by parents that aren鈥檛 their own. Young Barn Owls  in nest-switching if they鈥檙e having trouble finding food on their own after fledging, or if they aren鈥檛 getting enough food from their own parents.

That misdirected parenting is probably what鈥檚 going on with the Great Horned Owls, Riehl thinks. After incubating her eggs, the larger female owl was ready to take care of her own chicks. When they failed to hatch, her maternal instincts drove her to care for the offspring of her neighbor.

鈥淎dult birds have a strong behavioral response to nestlings, especially if they're trying to raise their own young,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he presence of nestling owls鈥攖heir begging calls, their appearance, and their movements鈥攎ight have stimulated the second female to bring them food, even though they're not her own nestlings.鈥

The novelty of the situation鈥攁dded to the fact that nest cams 鈥攈as garnered the owls plenty of attention. Catalano says an average 200-320 people are watching the cam at any given time, and the intrigue of the co-parenting moms has created a lot of interest in the community.  

鈥淲e鈥檝e had a few university professors, retired and active, that have been asking questions about it,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e have a great deal of citizen scientists that have taken it upon themselves to research these owls and their behavior. The community has really come together to figure out why these birds are doing this.鈥

As for what exactly is going on with this family dynamic, no one knows for sure. Luckily, even if the impetus behind this unusual trio isn鈥檛 totally clear, the setup seems to be working out for them; they share feeding responsibilities, and the one chicks has already fledged. It鈥檚 a peaceful, if unconventional, little family鈥攁t least, most of the time.

鈥淚n the evenings, when the father鈥檚 bringing food, [the females] do battle,鈥 Catalano says. 鈥淏ut nobody ever gets hurt鈥攊t鈥檚 more, 鈥榟ey, these are my kids, chill out.鈥欌

Still, while the family appears happy enough, parenting chicks that may not be related to her isn鈥檛 benefiting the smaller owl in an evolutionary sense.

鈥淗opefully next year she'll have her own nestlings to raise,鈥 Riehl says.

Correction: This article originally misstated which owl's eggs didn't hatch. It was the older, larger owl that unsuccessfully nested and began helping the other mother owl.