Abstract

Cuckoo nest parasites lay eggs in host nests and thereby transfer all reproduction costs to the hosts. This greatly reduces host fitness. Parasitism has selected for the evolution of anti-parasitic strategies in hosts, including nest defense. The dynamic risk assessment hypothesis holds that nest parasitism only threatens the nests during the egg stage, so hosts should reduce the level of defense against nest parasites after the egg stage. We studied the behavioral and acoustic responses of oriental reed warblers (Acrocephalus orientalis), during both the egg and nestling stages, toward the common cuckoo (Cuculus canorus), sparrowhawks (Accipiter nisus) and oriental turtle doves (Streptopelia orientalis). A. orientalis can visually distinguish cuckoos from sparrowhawks and doves, indicating that hawk mimicry did not work for the cuckoos. The behavioral response of hosts in the nestling stage was stronger than in the egg stage, which supports the offspring value hypothesis and suggests that cuckoos may also act as nest predators. However, there was no difference in the alarm calls A. orientalis produce in response to different invaders, indicating that different types of alarm calls may not contain specific information.

Highlights

  • Nest parasitism is a special reproductive behavior in which parasitic birds such as common cuckoos (Cuculus canorus) do not build nests themselves but lay their eggs in the nests of other birds

  • The results of generalized linear mixture models (GLMMs) showed that the responses of A. orientalis to different nest intruders were significantly different (F2,80 = 14.532, P < 0.001, GLMMs), and the interaction between the nest intruder and breeding stage had a significant effect on the behavioral response (F2,80 = 4.250, P = 0.018, GLMMs; Table 3)

  • Our results revealed that A. orientalis responded to nest intruders in a similar way at the egg stage; they were more aggressive to the cuckoo than to the sparrowhawk and dove at the nestling stage, suggesting that they can visually distinguish

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Summary

Introduction

Nest parasitism is a special reproductive behavior in which parasitic birds such as common cuckoos (Cuculus canorus) do not build nests themselves but lay their eggs in the nests of other birds (hosts) This transfers all of the reproductive costs to their hosts, who incubate the parasite eggs and raise parasite young (Davies, 2011; Soler, 2014). Many adult parasites (including some cuckoos, Cuculus spp., and cowbirds, Molothrus spp.) destroy entire eggs or nestlings in host nests at advanced breeding stages that are unsuitable for parasitism. This forces the hosts to rebuild nests and increases their chance of parasitism

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