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Evidence for egg discrimination preceding failed rejection attempts in a small cuckoo host

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TLDR
This is the first demonstration of a cuckoo host discriminating against real parasitic eggs but often accepting them, and results show that in host species experiencing difficulties in performing puncture ejection, non-mimetic cuckoos eggs may avoid rejection by means of their unusually high structural strength.
Abstract
Given the high costs of avian obligate brood parasitism, host individuals are selected to reject parasitic eggs they recognize as foreign. We show that rejection may not necessarily follow egg discrimination when selective removal of the parasitic egg is difficult. We studied egg rejection behaviour in a small host of the common cuckoo Cuculus canorus, the eastern olivaceous warbler Hippolais pallida, by experimental parasitism with model and real non-mimetic cuckoo eggs and video recordings of host behaviour. Hosts pecked 87 per cent (20 out of 23) of the model eggs but eventually accepted 43.5 per cent (10 out of 23) of them. A similar pattern was found for real cuckoo eggs, which were all pecked, but as many as 47 per cent (7 out of 15) of them were accepted. To our knowledge, this is the first demonstration of a cuckoo host discriminating against real parasitic eggs but often accepting them. Our results also show that in host species experiencing difficulties in performing puncture ejection, non-mimetic cuckoo eggs may avoid rejection by means of their unusually high structural strength.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Cognitive skills and bacterial load: comparative evidence of costs of cognitive proficiency in birds.

TL;DR: It is found that bird species with higher feeding innovation rates and rejection rates of experimental brood parasitic eggs had higher density of bacteria on their eggshells than the average species and the importance of parasite-mediated selection in explaining the evolution of cognitive abilities in animals is highlighted.
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Responses of Reed Warblers Acrocephalus scirpaceus to Non-Mimetic Eggs of Different Sizes in a Nest Parasitism Experiment

TL;DR: Egg size differences apparently affect the mode and speed but not the rate of egg rejection in this host population of Reed Warbler Acrocephalus scirpaceus parasitized by Common Cuckoos Cuculus canorus.
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Responses of potential hosts of Asian cuckoos to experimental parasitism

TL;DR: Experimental parasitized nests of 10 potential host species breeding in sympatry with four different cuckoo species in an area in Bangladesh using differently coloured model eggs to test host responses, showing considerable variation in egg rejection rates among various species.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of parasite-to-host egg ratio on egg rejection by a Brown-headed Cowbird host

TL;DR: The frequency of ejection did not differ between the 3 treatments, indicating that robins typically recognized their eggs regardless of whether they were the majority egg type, providing strong support for the true egg recognition hypothesis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interactions between the Asian koel (Eudynamys scolopacea) and its hosts

TL;DR: It is found that koel eggs were highly non-mimetic to those of common myna and long-tailed shrike, but showed good mimicry to house crow eggs, while cuckoo eggs showed excellent egg mimicry with the eggs of their black drongo hosts, as did common hawk cuckoos and piedcuckoos with their jungle babbler host.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

An experimental study of co-evolution between the cuckoo, cuculus canorus, and its hosts. ii. host egg markings, chick discrimination and general discussion

TL;DR: The variation in rejection of unlike eggs among different species of suitable cuckoo hosts is not related to the current costs or benefits of rejecting cuckoos, and it is suggested that the variation represents snap shots in evolutionary time of different stages of a species.
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Behavioural Responses of Potential Hosts Towards Artificial Cuckoo Eggs and Dummies

TL;DR: The results of this study lend support to the hypothesis that the differences in the degree of responses by the host species towards parasitism by the cuckoo reflect different stages in a continuous coevolutionary arms race with cuckoos.
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Recognition Errors and Probability of Parasitism Determine Whether Reed Warblers Should Accept or Reject Mimetic Cuckoo Eggs

TL;DR: It is shown that below a threshold of 19-41% parasitism, the warblers should accept mimetic cuckoo eggs because the costs of rejection outweigh the benefits, whereas above this threshold they should reject.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rejection Behavior by Common Cuckoo Hosts Towards Artificial Brood Parasite Eggs

TL;DR: The puncture resistance hypothesis proposed to explain the adaptive value (or evolution) of strength in cowbird eggs is supported and has received support from Picman and Rohwer et al.
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