Shiny cowbirds share foster mothers but not true mothers in multiply parasitized mockingbird nests

Obligate brood parasitic birds, such as cowbirds, evade parental care duties by laying their eggs in the nests of other species. Cowbirds are assumed to avoid laying repeatedly in the same nest so as to prevent intrabrood competition between their offspring. However, because searching for host nests...

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Autor principal: Gloag, R.
Otros Autores: Fiorini, V.D, Reboreda, Juan Carlos, Kacelnik, A.
Formato: Capítulo de libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Springer Verlag 2014
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100 1 |a Gloag, R. 
245 1 0 |a Shiny cowbirds share foster mothers but not true mothers in multiply parasitized mockingbird nests 
260 |b Springer Verlag  |c 2014 
270 1 0 |m Gloag, R.; Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, South Parks Rd, Oxford, OX1 3PS, United Kingdom; email: ros.gloag@zoo.ox.ac.uk 
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506 |2 openaire  |e Política editorial 
520 3 |a Obligate brood parasitic birds, such as cowbirds, evade parental care duties by laying their eggs in the nests of other species. Cowbirds are assumed to avoid laying repeatedly in the same nest so as to prevent intrabrood competition between their offspring. However, because searching for host nests requires time and energy, laying more than one egg per nest might be favoured where hosts are large and can readily rear multiple parasites per brood. Such 'repeat parasitism' by females would have important consequences for parasite evolution because young parasites would then incur indirect fitness costs from behaving selfishly. We investigated shiny cowbird (Molothrus bonariensis) parasitism of a large host, the chalk-browed mockingbird (Mimus saturninus), in a population where over 70 % of the parasitized mockingbird nests receive multiple cowbird eggs. We assessed egg maternity directly, using cameras at nests to film the laying of individually-marked females. We also supplemented video data with evidence from egg morphology, after confirming that each female lays eggs of a consistent appearance. From 133 eggs laid, we found that less than 5 % were followed by the same female visiting the nest to lay again or to puncture eggs. Multiple eggs in mockingbird nests were instead the result of different females, with up to eight individuals parasitizing a single brood. Thus, while cowbird chicks regularly share mockingbird nests with conspecifics, these are unlikely to be their maternal siblings. Our results are consistent with shiny cowbird females following a one-egg-per-nest rule, even where hosts can rear multiple parasitic young. © 2014 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.  |l eng 
536 |a Detalles de la financiación: Agencia Nacional de Promoción Científica y Tecnológica, PICT Raíces 2011-0045 
536 |a Detalles de la financiación: Cogito Foundation 
536 |a Detalles de la financiación: Acknowledgments We thank our anonymous reviewers for their helpful comments on this manuscript. We thank Juan Shaw and the Elsa Shaw de Pearson Foundation for supporting our fieldwork at Reserva El Destino. We also thank Romina Scardamaglia, María Cecilia De Mársico and Cynthia Ursino, for helping to trap birds in the field, and the five volunteers that performed the scoring of eggs. We are grateful to Agencia Nacional de Promoción Científica y Tecnológica (Proyecto PICT Raíces 2011-0045) and the Cogito Foundation for funding. RG was supported by the Cogito Foundation. JCR and VDF are Research Fellows of Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET). 
593 |a Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, South Parks Rd, Oxford, OX1 3PS, United Kingdom 
593 |a Departamento de Ecología, Genética y Evolución, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Pabellón II Ciudad Universitaria, C1428EGA Buenos Aires, Argentina 
650 1 7 |2 spines  |a BIRD 
650 1 7 |2 spines  |a AVES 
690 1 0 |a BROOD PARASITISM 
690 1 0 |a EGG MORPHOLOGY 
690 1 0 |a MIMUS SATURNINUS 
690 1 0 |a MOLOTHRUS BONARIENSIS 
690 1 0 |a MULTIPLE PARASITISM 
690 1 0 |a PARENTAL INVESTMENT 
690 1 0 |a REPEAT PARASITISM 
690 1 0 |a BROOD PARASITISM 
690 1 0 |a COMPETITION (ECOLOGY) 
690 1 0 |a CONSPECIFIC 
690 1 0 |a EVOLUTIONARILY STABLE STRATEGY 
690 1 0 |a FITNESS 
690 1 0 |a HOST-PARASITOID INTERACTION 
690 1 0 |a IMAGE ANALYSIS 
690 1 0 |a NEST PREDATION 
690 1 0 |a PARENTAL CARE 
690 1 0 |a POPULATION GENETICS 
690 1 0 |a MIMUS SATURNINUS 
690 1 0 |a MOLOTHRUS 
690 1 0 |a MOLOTHRUS BONARIENSIS 
700 1 |a Fiorini, V.D. 
700 1 |a Reboreda, Juan Carlos 
700 1 |a Kacelnik, A. 
773 0 |d Springer Verlag, 2014  |g v. 68  |h pp. 681-689  |k n. 4  |p Behav. Ecol. Sociobiol.  |x 03405443  |w (AR-BaUEN)CENRE-681  |t Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 
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