4.7 Article

Differential responses to related hosts by nesting and non-nesting parasites in a brood-parasitic duck

Journal

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
Volume 20, Issue 24, Pages 5328-5336

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2011.05281.x

Keywords

Bucephala islandica; conspecific brood parasitism; kin selection; microsatellites; nesting status; relatedness

Funding

  1. The Academy of Finland [128039, 118673, 134728, 1123565]
  2. The Swedish Cultural Foundation in Finland
  3. Waldemar von Frenckells stiftelse
  4. Oskar Oflunds stiftelse
  5. Delta Waterfowl Foundation

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Hostparasite relatedness may facilitate the evolution of conspecific brood parasitism, but empirical support for this contention remains inconclusive. One reason for this disparity may relate to the diversity of parasitic tactics, a key distinguishing feature being whether the parasite has a nest of her own. Previous work suggests that parasites without nests of their own may be of inferior phenotypic quality, but because of difficulties in identifying these parasitic individuals, little is known about their host selection criteria. We used high-resolution molecular maternity tests to assign parasitic offspring to known parasites with and without their own nests in a population of Barrows goldeneyes (Bucephala islandica). We determined whether parasite nesting status, hostparasite relatedness and distance between host and parasite nests affected the probability of parasitizing a host and the number of eggs laid per host. We also investigated whether nesting parasites, conventionally nesting females and non-nesting parasites differed regarding their age, structural size, body condition, nesting phenology or total brood size. The probability of engaging in parasitism increased with hostparasite relatedness and spatial proximity to host nests for nesting and non-nesting females alike. However, nesting parasites increased the number of eggs donated with relatedness to the host, while non-nesting parasites did not do so. Non-nesting parasites laid fewer eggs in total, but did not differ by any of the other quality measures from conventional nesters or nesting parasites. Our study provides the first demonstration that nesting and non-nesting parasites from the same population may use different host selection criteria.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available