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Family MATTERS

BBC Wildlife

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March 2021

Great crested grebes are known for their synchronised courtship choreography, but these birds work just as well together when it comes to raising chicks.

- David Pattyn

Family MATTERS

For more than 15 years, photographer David Pattyn has been enraptured by the complex family life of the great crested grebe. From the elaborate courtship rituals of potential partners in January and February to the emergence of fluffy, striped chicks in spring, all is captured from David’s inconspicuous floating hides. “Once you go in the water and you are in this small tent, it’s like you are completely sealed off from the rest of the world and it’s just you and the birds.”

The ‘weed ceremony’ or ‘reed dance’ is the seldom-seen pinnacle of the highly choreographed courtship displays and a sure sign that mating will commence soon afterwards. A couple will charge towards one another, heads low to the water’s surface, before rising, proffering their nesting material and frantically treading water.

A suitor runs on the water in a display of physical strength and health to impress a female. Courting takes place over several weeks and involves preening, calling, feather fluffing, mirrored head-shaking and plenty of showing off from both sexes.

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