Fledgling discrimination in the hoopoe, a potential host species of the great spotted cuckoo
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Arco, Laura; Peralta Sánchez, Juan Manuel; Martín-Vivaldi Martínez, Manuel Lorenzo; Soler Cruz, ManuelEditorial
Springer Nature
Materia
Brood parasitism Clamator glandarius Coevolution Fledgling discrimination Upupa epops
Date
2023-05-25Referencia bibliográfica
Arco, L., Peralta-Sánchez, J.M., Martín-Vivaldi, M. et al. Fledgling discrimination in the hoopoe, a potential host species of the great spotted cuckoo. Behav Ecol Sociobiol 77, 61 (2023). [https://doi.org/10.1007/s00265-023-03338-2]
Patrocinador
Universidad de Granada/ CBUA; Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation, European funds (FEDER) (CGL2007-61940/BOS, CGL2010-19233-C03-03); Junta de Andalucía (P09-RNM- 4557, P18-FR-2215); Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (Subprogram PTA-MICINN) (Ref. PTA2010-4298-I)Résumé
Obligate brood parasites lay their eggs in nests of other species, with host parents bearing the cost of raising their offspring.
These costs imposed on hosts select for the evolution of host defenses against parasitism at all stages of the reproductive
cycle. The most effective defense is egg rejection at early stages of the breeding cycle, with later-stage defenses (nestling
and fledgling discrimination) being less common. In this study, we tested whether the hoopoe (Upupa epops), a potential
host of the great spotted cuckoo (Clamator glandarius) without egg rejection ability, presents defenses after the egg stage.
We experimentally parasitized hoopoe nests with great spotted cuckoo nestlings creating mixed broods (with hoopoe and
cuckoo nestlings) and broods with only cuckoo nestlings and measured parental feeding behavior and survival of nestlings
and fledglings of both species. Cuckoo fledglings were fed fewer often than hoopoe fledglings in mixed broods, and adults
approached more often to feed hoopoe fledglings than cuckoo fledglings. Consequently, the survival of cuckoo fledglings
in both mixed and only-cuckoo-broods, was significantly lower than that of hoopoe fledglings. These results suggest that
hoopoes would discriminate great spotted cuckoo fledglings, with or without direct comparison with their own fledglings.
However, the survival of some cuckoos suggests that hoopoes have not reached highly efficient defenses so, other life history
traits hindering parasitism by cuckoos may explain low parasitism rates and low levels of defenses in this species