David Frank McKinney (cited as Frank McKinney) (1928–2001) was a British-born ornithologist and ethologist, who worked in Canada and the USA and specialized in the social behavior of waterfowl.
In the 1950s and 1960s, his research focused on the macroevolutionary aspects of social signals and other behavior patterns in ducks.[2] The 1972 book "Sexual Selection and the Descent of Man: The Darwinian Pivot" edited by Bernard Grant Campbell[5][6] (1930-2017) stimulated McKinney's interest in gender conflict and raised his doubts about older theories of pair bonding. McKinney changed his thinking on "three-bird-chase" behavior, as well as the focus of his research. During the last 20 years of his career, his research dealt with sperm competition, partner switching, and related topics.[2]
His most important publications include "Behavioral Specializations for River Life in the African Black Duck (Anas sparsa Eyton)" (1978), "Rape Among Mallards" (1979), "Forced Copulation in Captive Mallards I. Fertilization of Eggs" (1980), "Forced copulation in captive mallards (Anas platyrhynchos): II. Temporal factors" from 1982 and "Forced Copulation in Captive Mallards III. Sperm Competition" (1983). At the University of Minnesota, he lectured on 48 different academic topics. As a professor, he supervised more than 30 students for M.S. or Ph.D. theses. He served on more than 150 Ph.D. He supervised almost 50 undergraduate research projects on animal behavior, including fish, iguanas, and primates.[2]
He was elected in 1975 a Fellow of the American Ornithologists’ Union (A.O.U.) and in 1994 was awarded the A.O.U.'s Brewster Medal for his research on the social behavior of waterfowl. He was personally acquainted with all of the most important ethologists in the decades of the 20th century after WW II.[2]
In 1963 McKinney married D. Meryl Morris (1924–2007).[7] When he retired in 2000, he intended to write a comprehensive book on the social behavior of ducks. However, he suffered a severe heart attack on Christmas Day of 2000. After he slowly recovered, he and his wife wanted to move to another house to make life easier. While on an errand to get packing boxes, he suffered a second heart attack and quickly died, leaving Meryl McKinney a widow after 38 years of marriage.[2]
McKinney, F. (1961). "An analysis of the displays of the European eider Somateria mollissima mollissima (Linnaeus) and the Pacific eider Somateria mollissima v. nigra Bonaparte". Behaviour. Supplement. 7 (7): 111–125. JSTOR30039137.
"Displays of four species of Blue-winged Ducks". Living Bird. 9: 29–64. 1970. ISSN0459-6137.
Farner, Donald Sankey, ed. (1973). "Ecoethologigical aspects of reproduction by F. McKinney". Breeding biology of birds : proceedings. Washington: National Academy of Sciences. pp. 6–21. ISBN0-309-02109-X.
Baerends, Gerard; Beer, Colin; Manning, Aubrey, eds. (1976). "The Evolution of duck displays by F. McKinney". Function and Evolution in Behaviour: Essays in Honour of Professor Niko Tinbergen. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 331–357. ISBN0-19-857382-0.
Rosenblatt, Jay Seth; Hinde, Robert Aubrey; Beer, Colin; Busnel, Marie-Claire, eds. (1978). "Comparative Approaches to Social Behavior in Closely Related Species of Birds by F. McKinney". Advances in the Study of Behavior. Vol. 8. New York: Academic Press. pp. 1–38. doi:10.1016/S0065-3454(08)60130-8. ISBN0-12-004508-7.
with Walter Roy Siegfried, Irvin Joseph Ball, Jr., & Peter Graham Hyde Frost (1978). "Behavioral Specializations for River Life in the African Black Duck (Anas sparsa Eyton)". Zeitschrift für Tierpsychologie. 48 (4): 349–400. doi:10.1111/j.1439-0310.1978.tb00266.x.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
with Peter Graham Hyde Frost, Irvin Joseph Ball Jr., & Walter Roy Siegfried (1979). "Sex Ratios, Morphology and Growth of the African Black Duck". Ostrich. 50 (4): 220–233. Bibcode:1979Ostri..50..220F. doi:10.1080/00306525.1979.9634117.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
with Pierre Mineau & Scott Richard Derrickson (1983). "Forced Copulation in Waterfowl". Behaviour. 86 (3/4): 250–294. doi:10.1163/156853983X00390. JSTOR4534287.
Rubinstein, Daniel Ian; Wrangham, Richard Walter, eds. (1984). "Ecological Factors Influencing the Social Systems of Migratory Dabbling Ducks by F. McKinney". Ecological Aspects of Social Evolution: Birds and Mammals. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. pp. 53–171. ISBN0-691-08440-8. 2014 pbk reprint
Bell, Ben Dean, ed. (1991). "Male parental care in Southern Hemisphere dabbling ducks by F. McKinney". Acta XX Congressus Internationalis Ornithologici: Christchurch, New Zealand, 2-9 December 1990. Wellington, New Zealand: Ornithological Congress Trust Board. pp. 868–875. ISBN0-9597975-3-X.
Batt, Bruce Duncan John; Afton, Alan Daynne; Anderson, Michael George; Ankney, Claude Davison; Johnson, Douglas Hamilton; Kadlec, John Adolph; Krapu, Gary Lee, eds. (1992). "Courtship, pair formation, and signal systems by F. McKinney". Ecology and Management of Breeding Waterfowl. Minneapolis, London: University of Minnesota Press. pp. 214–250. ISBN0-8166-6832-9.
^Williams, G. C. (1973). "Sexual Selection and the Descent of Man, 1871-1971, edited by Bernard Campbell, Ed". Science. 179 (4075): 788–789. doi:10.1126/science.179.4075.788. ISSN0036-8075.