Abstract
Wild Zimbabwe Ostriches Struthio camelus were studied during four successive years. Information on breeding seasons and laying patterns was compared with that of domesticated South African hybrid Ostriches in Bophuthatswana. In wild populations laying occurred mainly from July to December or early January, while domesticated birds continued until at least the end of February. Domesticated birds normally laid about 16 eggs in succession, one every second day. There was marked synchronisation of laying and the middle of each successive peak in egg production was about 6 weeks from the preceding peak. Wild birds laid up to eight eggs in any one nest, and normally clutches were contributed by three females, the average combined clutch being 12 or 13 per nest. Circumstantial evidence suggests that individual females may lay in more than one nest during a single laying sequence. Comparisons between rainfall patterns and laying rhythms proved inconclusive.
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