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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Egg rejection based on egg size recognition as a specific strategy against parasitic cuckoos

Ping Ye, +6 more
- 14 May 2022 - 
- Vol. 69, Iss: 2, pp 156-164
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TLDR
Analysis of the brood parasite system between the Asian emerald cuckoo Chrysococcyx maculatus and its host, the chestnut-crowned warbler, provides strong evidence supporting the theory that egg size recognition can be evolve in hosts as a specific anti-parasite adaptation against cuckoos.
Abstract
Abstract In the coevolutionary interactions between avian brood parasites and their hosts, egg recognition based on color and/or pattern is a common and effective defense to counter parasitism. However, for egg recognition based on size, only a few studies have found affirmative results, and they do not provide unambiguous evidence that egg size recognition in hosts has evolved as an important and specific anti-parasite adaptation against parasite eggs. We studied the brood parasite system between the Asian emerald cuckoo Chrysococcyx maculatus and its host, the chestnut-crowned warbler Phylloscopus castaniceps. The cuckoo parasitizes the warbler using non-mimetic and larger eggs at a parasitism rate of 12.9%. The warbler nests used in this experiment were built in a dark environment with the nest illuminance near 0 lux. Experiments with 2 types of model eggs with colors and patterns resembling cuckoo eggs of different sizes (cuckoo egg size or host egg size) showed that the warblers were able to reject 63.6% of cuckoo model eggs under these dim light conditions. However, model eggs with the same color and pattern similar to the warbler egg size were always accepted. This study provides strong evidence supporting the theory that egg size recognition can be evolved in hosts as a specific anti-parasite adaptation against cuckoos. We suggest that the egg size recognition of the warbler is an outcome of the tradeoff between the costs of violating the parental investment rule and suffering cuckoo parasitism.

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Egg Rejection and Nest Sanitation in an Island Population of Barn Swallows (Hirundo rustica): Probability, Response Latency, and Sex Effects

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors examined the behavior of barn swallows (Hirundo rustica), one of the most abundant and widespread birds in the world, and found that nest sanitation may constitute an evolutionary precursor to foreign egg rejection; however, nest sanitation rarely increases egg rejection regarding probability and response latency.
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Revealing the roles of egg darkness and nest similarity for a cryptic parasite egg versus host's cognition: an alternate coevolutionary trajectory

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors investigated the relationship between the two components of egg crypticity, egg darkness (dim egg coloration) and nest similarity (similarity to host nest appearance), and developed a "field psychophysics" experimental design to dissect these components while controlling for undesired confounding factors.
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Egg recognition and nestling discrimination in the Crested Myna (Acridotheres cristatellus): Size matters

TL;DR: In this article , the authors investigated whether egg and nestling recognitions in the Crested Myna (Acridotheres cristatellus) are based on size cues, and whether the egg cognitive mechanism is recognition by discordancy based on the size cues.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

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Tetrachromacy, oil droplets and bird plumage colours

TL;DR: This work examines the advantages of coloured oil droplets, UV vision and tetrachromacy for discriminating a diverse set of avian plumage spectra under natural illumination and finds that Discriminability is enhanced both by tetrACHromacy and coloured oil Droplets.
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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.
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