4.4 Article

Discrimination and ejection of eggs and nestlings by the fan-tailed gerygone from New Caledonia

期刊

CURRENT ZOOLOGY
卷 67, 期 6, 页码 653-663

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/cz/zoab066

关键词

begging calls; brood parasitism; co-evolutionary arms race; egg discrimination; nestling discrimination; nestling polymorphism

类别

资金

  1. National Science Centre, Poland [NCN 2012/05/E/NZ8/02694, NCN 2016/23/B/NZ8/03082]
  2. Japan Society for Promotion of Science (JSPS) [24-4578, 24770028]
  3. Rikkyo University [SFR 11-54]
  4. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [24770028] Funding Source: KAKEN

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Nestling rejection is a rare host defense strategy compared to egg rejection. The fan-tailed gerygone accepts nonmimetic eggs of its parasite but ejects mimetic parasite nestlings. Discrimination is based on egg size and auditory/visual cues, with rejection frequency increasing during the breeding season.
Nestling rejection is a rare type of host defense against brood parasitism compared with egg rejection. Theoretically, host defenses at both egg and nestling stages could be based on similar underlying discrimination mechanisms but, due to the rarity of nestling rejector hosts, few studies have actually tested this hypothesis. We investigated egg and nestling discrimination by the fan-tailed gerygone Gerygone flavolateralis, a host that seemingly accepts nonmimetic eggs of its parasite, the shining bronze-cuckoo Chalcites lucidus, but ejects mimetic parasite nestlings. We introduced artificial eggs or nestlings and foreign gerygone nestlings in gerygone nests and compared begging calls of parasite and host nestlings. We found that the gerygone ejected artificial eggs only if their size was smaller than the parasite or host eggs. Ejection of artificial nestlings did not depend on whether their color matched that of the brood. The frequency of ejection increased during the course of the breeding season mirroring the increase in ejection frequency of parasite nestlings by the host. Cross-fostered gerygone nestlings were frequently ejected when lacking natal down and when introduced in the nest before hatching of the foster brood, but only occasionally when they did not match the color of the foster brood. Begging calls differed significantly between parasite and host nestlings throughout the nestling period. Our results suggest that the fan-tailed gerygone accepts eggs within the size range of gerygone and cuckoo eggs and that nestling discrimination is based on auditory and visual cues other than skin color. This highlights the importance of using a combined approach to study discrimination mechanisms of hosts.

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