4.2 Article

Avian colour perception predicts behavioural responses to experimental brood parasitism in chaffinches

Journal

JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 2, Pages 293-301

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1420-9101.2009.01898.x

Keywords

avian vision; chaffinch; cuckoo parasitism; egg discrimination; host perception; sensory visual discrimination

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Education and Science [CGL2008-00718]
  2. Norwegian Research Council
  3. Faculty of Science and Technology, NTNU

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Hosts of cuckoos have evolved defences allowing them to discriminate and reject parasite eggs. Mechanisms of discrimination are mostly visually mediated, and have been studied using approaches that do not account for what the receiver (i.e. host) actually can discriminate. Here, for the first time we apply a perceptual model of colour discrimination to study behavioural responses to natural variation in parasite egg appearance in chaffinches Fringilla coelebs. Discrimination of parasite eggs gradually increased with increasing differences in chromatic contrasts as perceived by birds between parasite and host eggs. These results confirm that colour differences of the eggs as perceived by birds are important integral parts of a matching signal used by chaffinch hosts.

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