A Nazca Booby, and the End of Innocence

November 19, 2025
1 min read
Juvenile Nazca Booby, Isla de la Plata, Ecuador, May 2013

Don’t be deceived by the innocent look this newborn Nazca Booby, less than a month old, is sharing. It’s quite likely that she aided in the untimely demise of her younger sibling.

Nazca Boobies, like these that I observed in May 2013 on Isla de la Plata off the shore of Puerto Lopez, Ecuador, practice obligatory siblicide, an act Wiki describes as such:

Mothers lay two eggs, several days apart. If both eggs hatch, the elder chick pushes its sibling out of the nest area, leaving it to die of thirst or cold. The parent booby cannot intervene and the younger chick inevitably dies.

and

.. Nazca Booby dominant A-chicks always begin pecking their younger sibling(s) as soon as they hatch; moreover, assuming it is healthy, the A-chick usually pecks its younger sibling to death or pushes it out of the nest scrape within the first two days that the junior chick is alive.

and

Adults that have failed to breed frequently seek out nestlings in their colony, and during those visits they often bite, preen and even try to copulate with chicks. The causes of this behavior are not fully understood.

This Oedipal-like variation does rub some of the varnish from the cuteness factor of these birds, but it doesn’t make them any less amazing.

Most common in the Galapagos Islands, they are plentiful enough on Isla de la Plata, the island referred to as the Poor Man’s Galapagos, which sits just off the coast of Ecuador near Puerto Lopez, to ensure that most visitors will see a few during their day hike across the island. The one below, according to my guide, had recently arrived from the Galapagos, some 1,100 kilometers, or almost 700 miles, away.

More:

Photos from 16 May 2023. Originally published on 3 January 2014 on my blog, Piran Café, which is no longer being updated and moved here on 25 June, 2017. Last updated on 18 November, 2025.


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Bob Ramsak

Bob Ramsak

I'm a reporter, photographer and researcher driven by passions for travel, culture and justice. I've visited 62 countries and write something and make pictures every day.

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Moving in. Watch your head. And look out for the birds.

This is BobRamsak.com, a public notebook by Bob Ramsak.

I’m a long-time journalist, photographer and researcher driven by passions for environmental, social and refugee justice. I’ve visited 62 countries and write something and make pictures (almost) every day. This site is a notebook and photolog where I track and (sometimes) comment on those interests, journal my travels and log my current obsessions. At the moment the most dominant one is my renewed passion for birding and bird photography.

This site primarily serves as a garden for my memories and experiences, which I hope visitors will find useful or of interest. If you find something helpful here, or have a thought or insight to add, please leave a comment or drop me a line to let me know. I’ll be delighted to make your acquaintance.

Based in Nice, France.

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