Abstract

Avian brood parasites lay their eggs into the nests of other species, which incubate them and raise the chicks until their independence. Despite living their early weeks of life surrounded by heterospecifics, young brood parasites have the ability to recognize and associate to conspecifics after independence. It has been proposed that the initial conspecific recognition develops when a young parasite encounters a unique species-specific signal that triggers the learning of other aspects of the producer of the signal. For cowbirds (Molothrus spp.), this species-specific signal is hypothesized to be the chatter call. Young birds also could express auditory biases, which in some cases lead to discrimination in favor of conspecific songs. Therefore, the perceptual selectivity for chatters might be also present in nestlings. Our aim was to assess if nestlings of the shiny cowbird (M. bonariensis) present a preferential begging response to conspecific chatter calls. We evaluated if they respond more to the parasitic vocalization than host chicks and if they respond more to the chatter than to heterospecific nonhost calls. We tested shiny cowbird chicks reared by chalk-browed mockingbirds (Mimus saturninus) or house wrens (Troglodytes aedon) and host chicks, as control species. We randomly presented to 6-day-old chicks the following playback treatments: (1) conspecific chatter calls, (2) host calls, used as positive controls, and (3) nonhost calls, used as negative control. We measured if chicks begged during the playback treatments and the begging intensity. When responding to the playback of chatter calls, shiny cowbird chicks begged at a higher frequency and more intensively than host chicks. Shiny cowbird chicks reared by mockingbirds begged more intensively to playbacks of conspecific chatter calls than to host calls, while those reared by wrens begged with a similar intensity to playbacks of conspecific chatter and host calls. On the contrary, wren nestlings begged more intensively to playbacks of the wren call than to chatter calls. Mockingbird nestlings did not beg during any treatment. None of the three species begged during the playback of nonhost calls. Our results show that the chatter call produced a preferential begging response in cowbird nestlings, which may be the beginning of a process of conspecific recognition.

Highlights

  • Conspecific recognition is essential for animals, as it allows individuals to identify members of their own species, search for pairs, and mate successfully, avoiding fitness cost through misdirected social and reproductive effort

  • Our results show that shiny cowbird chicks have preferential begging responses to conspecific chatter calls compared with host chicks

  • When listening to the conspecific vocalizations, parasitic chicks begged at a higher proportion (65–76%) than host chicks (0–17%) and cowbirds reared by wrens begged more intensively than wren chicks

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Summary

Introduction

Conspecific recognition is essential for animals, as it allows individuals to identify members of their own species, search for pairs, and mate successfully, avoiding fitness cost through misdirected social and reproductive effort. In species whose juveniles are reared by their parents, as mammals and most birds, after an early experience with conspecific adults, individuals learn the characteristics of their own species forming an internal representation of salient phenotypic attributes or recognition template and restrict their social preferences as adults to them (Bateson, 1966; Immelmann, 1975). Bliard et al (2021) found that nestlings of collared flycatcher (Ficedula albicollis) discriminate song based on conspecific alarm calls They manipulated song phrases starting with the conspecific alarm call followed by either conspecific or heterospecific song notes and found that nestlings responded to both treatments due to the inclusion of the call. Wheatcroft and Qvarnström (2017), manipulated the early social experience of collared and pied flycatchers by swapping young embryos between the nests of two species and found that chicks discriminated in favor of the song of its own species, even when raised by adults from the other species

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