Journal
NATURE
Volume 422, Issue 6928, Pages 157-160Publisher
NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature01460
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Cuckoo nestlings that evict all other young from the nest soon after hatching impose a high reproductive cost on their hosts(1). In defence, hosts have coevolved strategies to prevent brood parasitism. Puzzlingly, they do not extend beyond the egg stage(2-5). Thus, hosts adept at recognizing foreign eggs remain vulnerable to exploitation by cuckoo nestlings(6,7). Here we show that the breach of host egg defences by cuckoos creates a new stage in the coevolutionary cycle. We found that defences used during the egg-laying period by host superb fairy-wrens (Malurus cyaneus) are easily evaded by the Horsfield's bronze-cuckoo (Chrysococcyx basalis), a specialist fairy-wren brood parasite. However, although hosts never deserted their own broods, they later abandoned 40% of nests containing a lone Horsfield's bronze-cuckoo nestling, and 100% of nests with a lone shining bronze-cuckoo nestling (Chrysococcyx lucidus), an occasional fairy-wren brood parasite. Our experiments demonstrate that host discrimination against evictor-cuckoo nestlings is possible, and suggest that it has selected for the evolution of nestling mimicry in bronze-cuckoos.
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