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Journal ArticleDOI

Brood parasitism, female condition and clutch reduction in the common eider Somateria mollisima

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TLDR
Meta-analysis of this and 3 other eider studies shows that there is a cost of being parasitised in this precocial species: host females laid on average 7% fewer eggs than other females, and there was no evidence of low condition in parasites.
Abstract
Conspecific brood parasitism (CBP) is an alternative reproductive tactic found in many animals with parental care. Parasitizing females lay eggs in the nests of other females (hosts) of the same species, which incubate and raise both their own and the foreign offspring. The causes and consequences of CBP are debated. Using albumen fingerprinting of eggs for accurately detecting parasitism, we here analyse its relation to female condition and clutch size in High Arctic common eiders Somateria mollissima borealis. Among 166 clutches in a Svalbard colony, 31 (19%) contained eggs from more than one female, and 40 of 670 eggs (6%) were parasitic. In 6 cases an active nest with egg(s) was taken over by another female. Many suitable nest sites were unoccupied, indicating that CBP and nest takeover are reproductive tactics, not only consequences of nest site shortage. Similarity in body mass between female categories suggests that condition does not determine whether a nesting female becomes parasitised. There was no evidence of low condition in parasites: egg size was similar in hosts and parasites, and parasitism was equally frequent early and late in the laying season. Meta-analysis of this and 3 other eider studies shows that there is a cost of being parasitised in this precocial species: host females laid on average 7% fewer eggs than other females.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Brood parasitism, relatedness and sociality: a kinship role in female reproductive tactics.

TL;DR: Genetic evidence shows that also New World quails have female‐biased natal philopatry, CBP and brood merging, inviting further study and comparison with waterfowl and Kin‐related parasitism also occurs in some insects, with revealing parallels and differences compared to birds.
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Helping Relatives Survive and Reproduce: Inclusive Fitness and Reproductive Value in Brood Parasitism

TL;DR: The results and observed levels of host-parasite relatedness suggest that being “parasitized” in waterfowl is sometimes neutral or even advantageous because of inclusive-fitness benefits, contributing to evolution of frequent conspecific brood parasitism in this group.

Conspecific brood parasitism in waterfowl and cues parasites use

TL;DR: The traditional conceptual framework of CBP in waterfowl is reviewed and empirical studies that have attempted to test related hypotheses are considered, including the hypothesis that CBP allows some females to reproduce when not otherwise possible, whereas other females use parasitic egglaying as a way to enhance their fecundity.
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Female sociality and kin discrimination in brood parasitism: unrelated females fight over egg laying

TL;DR: The results demonstrate active female kin discrimination in common eiders, used against nonrelatives that try to lay eggs in the nest, and show how female sociality in eiders may resemble certain long-lived matriarchal mammals.
Journal ArticleDOI

High rates of conspecific brood parasitism revealed by microsatellite analysis in a diving duck, the common pochard Aythya ferina

TL;DR: Despite high rates of CBP in a ground-nesting diving duck, the common pochard Aythya ferina, the costs associated with this reproductive tactic appear to be low for host females since neither clutch size nor host-egg hatching probability were reduced due to CBP.
References
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TL;DR: This paper found no evidence of nonlinear relationships between body mass and body size and showed that residuals from reduced major axis (RMA) and major axis regression performed better than residuals of ordinary least squares (OLS) regression as indices of body condition.
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Mass/length residuals: measures of body condition or generators of spurious results?

TL;DR: In this article, the authors identify a series of key assumptions underlying the use of this method, each of which is likely to be violated in some or all studies, and explain the poor relationship observed between OLS residuals and more direct measures of condition.
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Development and validation of MIX: comprehensive free software for meta-analysis of causal research data

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