Abstract

Abstract The Warbling Vireo (Vireo gilvus) is one of the most heavily parasitized host species of the Brown-headed Cowbird (Molothrus ater), suffering up to 80% parasitism in some areas. Warbling Vireo nests that are parasitized by cowbirds typically produce no vireo young. To make predictions about the consequences of brood parasitism on local host populations, we investigated factors that allow such high parasitism to occur. The major factors leading to high levels of brood parasitism on Warbling Vireos in the Okanagan Valley, British Columbia, are habitat overlap with cowbirds and the lack of response of vireos to cowbird eggs. Warbling Vireos responded more strongly to a cowbird dummy placed near the nest than to a dummy of a “neutral” species (junco) or to a common nest predator (crow). Preliminary simulation models based on population parameters obtained from three summers of fieldwork suggest that Warbling Vireos are in danger of extirpation from the Okanagan Valley if little movement of birds occurs between areas with different levels of brood parasitism. The models also indicate the sensitivity of this species to variation in adult and juvenile survival rates and number of successful broods produced per season. Our results emphasize the need for a metapopulation analysis that compares the population ecology of Warbling Vireos at high elevations (and probably with low parasitism) with that at low elevations (high parasitism) and that ascertains whether sufficient dispersal occurs between these populations to prevent extinction at lower elevations. Sufficient dispersal is indicated by apparently stable vireo populations in the Okanagan Valley and by Breeding Bird Survey data that show an overall increasing trend for this species in British Columbia.

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