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Different recognition cues reveal the decision rules used for egg rejection by hosts of a variably mimetic avian brood parasite

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TLDR
It is found that the presence of spotting significantly decreased the probability of rejection while increments in brightness significantly increased rejection frequencies, and the cognitive rules underlying mockingbird rejection behavior can be explained by a decision-making model which predicts changes in the levels of rejection in direct relation to the number of relevant attributes shared between host and parasite eggs.
Abstract
Brood parasitism imposes several fitness costs on the host species. To reduce these costs, hosts of avian brood parasites have evolved various defenses, of which egg rejection is the most prevalent. In the face of variable host-parasite mimicry and the costs of egg discrimination itself, many hosts reject only some foreign eggs. Here, we experimentally varied the recognition cues to study the underlying cognitive mechanisms used by the Chalk-browed Mockingbird (Mimus saturninus) to reject the white immaculate eggs laid by the parasitic Shiny Cowbird (Molothrus bonariensis). Immaculate eggs are the only parasite eggs rejected by this host, as it accepts all polymorphic, spotted eggs laid by cowbirds. Using a within-breeding pair experimental design, we tested for the salience of spotting, UV reflectance, and brightness in eliciting rejection. We found that the presence of spotting significantly decreased the probability of rejection while increments in brightness significantly increased rejection frequencies. The cognitive rules underlying mockingbird rejection behavior can be explained by a decision-making model which predicts changes in the levels of rejection in direct relation to the number of relevant attributes shared between host and parasite eggs.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The wages of violence: mobbing by mockingbirds as a frontline defence against brood-parasitic cowbirds

TL;DR: Investigating the effectiveness of mobbing by chalk-browed mockingbirds as a defence against their parasite, the shiny cowbird, found that mobbing at the nest significantly reduced the likelihood that cowbirds broke a mockingbird egg during their visit, despite almost all mobbed visits concluding with a cowbird laying an egg.
Journal ArticleDOI

Simultaneous viewing of own and parasitic eggs is not required for egg rejection by a cuckoo host

TL;DR: Hosts can rely on comparisons of foreign egg colors against an internal recognition template of acceptable (own) egg phenotypes to reject foreign eggs, suggesting a role for discordancy and/or online self-referent phenotype matching.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spectral tuning and perceptual differences do not explain the rejection of brood parasitic eggs by American robins ( Turdus migratorius )

TL;DR: The research combined avian visual perceptual modeling and behavioral experimentation to investigate chromatic cues eliciting parasitic egg rejection in American robins, and suggests that robins respond specifically to parasitism by cowbirds, despite an apparent lack of sensory tuning toward the detection of the background color of cowbird eggs.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Value of Artificial Stimuli in Behavioral Research: Making the Case for Egg Rejection Studies in Avian Brood Parasitism

TL;DR: In response to repeated criticism about the value of artificial stimuli, four potential benefits of using them in egg recognition research are described and a specific test of whether responses to artificial cues can accurately predict responses to natural cues is provided.
Journal ArticleDOI

Variation in multicomponent recognition cues alters egg rejection decisions: a test of the optimal acceptance threshold hypothesis.

TL;DR: Results uncover how a single component of a multicomponent cue can shift a host’s discrimination threshold and illustrate how the optimal acceptance threshold hypothesis can be used as a framework to quantify the direction and amount of the shift of the response curve across relevant phenotypic ranges.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Alternative reproductive strategies and tactics: diversity within sexes.

TL;DR: Recent findings suggest that almost all alternative reproductive phenotypes within the sexes are due to alternative tactics within a conditional strategy, and, as such, while the average fitnesses of the alternative phenotypes are unequal, the strategy is favoured in evolution.
Book

Cuckoos, cowbirds and other cheats

TL;DR: This book discusses the co-evolution of host defences and Common Cuckoo trickery, as well as one hundred species of brood parasitic birds and some puzzles.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Model System for Coevolution: Avian Brood Parasitism

TL;DR: Systems in which the interacting species are few (optimally only two) provide the clearest examples of coevolution, which includes many mutualistic relationships and some parasite-host associations.

A model system of coevolution: avian brood parasitism.

Si Rothstein
TL;DR: A rigorous definition of coevolution requires that a trait in one species has evolved in response to a trait of another species, which trait was itself evolved by the first species as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

The evolution of conspecific acceptance thresholds

TL;DR: This work attempts to provide a theory of the action component of conspecific discrimination, and examines the factors that determine the optimal or evolutionarily stable acceptance threshold, that is, the level of dissimilarity between the actor's template and the recipient's phenotype below which recipients are accepted and aboveWhich recipients are rejected.
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