Abstract

Avian brood parasites leave parental care of their offspring to foster parents. Theory predicts that parasites should select for large host nests when they have sufficient available host nests at a given time. We developed an empirical experimental design to test cognitive ability of female cuckoos in nest size by studying nest choice of common cuckoos (Cuculus canorus) among nests of its Oriental reed warbler (Acrocephalus orientalis) hosts. We presented three groups of experimental nests: 1) nest dyads tied together including one large and one small artificial nest from reed leaves, 2) nest triads tied together used the old modified warbler's own nests including enlarged, reduced and medium-sized nests, and 3) nest dyads are similar to group 1, but not tied together to elicit parasitism by common cuckoos. We predict that cuckoos prefer larger nest than medium one, the next is smaller nest. Our findings showed that common cuckoo females generally prefer large nests over medium or small sized nests in all three experimental groups. Furthermore, cuckoo parasitism was significantly more common than in previous studies of the same warbler population, implying that larger, higher and more exposed host nests effectively increased the probability of cuckoo parasitism.

Highlights

  • MethodsThis study was performed in Zhalong National Nature Reserve (46ο48′–47ο31′ N, 123ο51′–124ο37′ E), which is located in Heilongjiang, northeast China

  • Avian brood parasites leave parental care of their offspring to foster parents

  • We developed an empirical experimental design to address this hypothesis by studying nest choice of common cuckoos (Cuculus canorus) among nests of its Oriental reed warbler (Acrocephalus orientalis) hosts

Read more

Summary

Methods

This study was performed in Zhalong National Nature Reserve (46ο48′–47ο31′ N, 123ο51′–124ο37′ E), which is located in Heilongjiang, northeast China. Fieldwork was carried out during the breeding season (June to August) in years 2015–2019. Habitats were primarily reed swamps with several small villages (Yang et al 2017; Wang et al 2020b). The common cuckoo is the main parasitic cuckoo in this study area, and the Oriental reed warbler is its predominant host with a high parasitism rate ranging from 34.3– 65.5% among years (Yang et al 2017), cuckoos often remove one or two eggs before they parasitize the host nest (Wang et al 2020a).

Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call