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Why Some Eider Ducklings End Up in the Wrong Brood

Ten-year study shows how female condition, brain size and duckling quality drive brood mixing in Common Eiders

Eider Train

A clearer picture of a long-mysterious behaviour
Common Eiders in the Baltic Sea frequently form mixed broods, with ducklings switching families soon after hatching. Although this has long been recognised, the reasons behind it have remained uncertain. A ten-year study tracking 438 females and more than 2,600 individually marked ducklings now shows that brood fragmentation is strongly shaped by the mother’s physical condition, her relative brain size, and the health of her ducklings.

The role of the mother
Females in poorer condition at hatching were significantly more likely to lose ducklings to neighbouring broods. Those with relatively smaller heads – a field proxy for smaller brains in this population – also struggled more to keep broods together. Larger broods increased the challenge: the more ducklings a female tended, the more likely at least one would drift off. Timing mattered too. Broods hatching just before the seasonal peak were at greatest risk of losing young, simply because the surrounding waters were full of similar-aged broods available to absorb straying ducklings.

The role of the ducklings
Ducklings that ended up adopted elsewhere tended to be in poorer condition than their brood-mates. These weaker individuals were more prone to straying, slowing down, or occupying peripheral positions – all of which increase the chance of drifting into another brood. Ducklings from mothers in poorer condition were marginally more likely to be adopted, suggesting that maternal state influences both brood cohesion and the consistency of duckling quality.

Strategy or constraint?
While brood mixing can appear like deliberate “donation”, the findings point more towards constraint. High-quality females with larger brains and strong energy reserves were better able to keep broods intact, while low-condition females and weaker ducklings were most likely to be involved in transfers. For the ducklings, joining another brood may offer no particular advantage and may even increase risk, as adoptees often end up on the edges of large groups where predation pressure is greatest.

A window into seabird family dynamics
The study concludes that brood fragmentation in Eiders is best viewed as an inevitable outcome of ecological pressures and individual limitations, rather than an adaptive strategy. As duck populations face shifting food supplies, predation pressure and changing sea conditions, understanding why some families stay together and others do not will be vital for interpreting trends in sea duck survival and breeding success.

 

November 2025

Read the full paper here

 

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