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The sight of an adult brood parasite near the nest is an insufficient cue for a honeyguide host to reject foreign eggs.


Type

Article

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Authors

Tong, Wenfei 
Horrocks, Nicholas PC 
Spottiswoode, Claire N 

Abstract

Hosts of brood-parasitic birds typically evolve anti-parasitism defences, including mobbing of parasitic intruders at the nest and the ability to recognize and reject foreign eggs from their clutches. The Greater Honeyguide Indicator indicator is a virulent brood parasite that punctures host eggs and kills host young, and accordingly, a common host, the Little Bee-eater Merops pusillus frequently rejects entire clutches that have been parasitized. We predicted that given the high costs of accidentally rejecting an entire clutch, and that the experimental addition of a foreign egg is insufficient to induce this defence, Bee-eaters require the sight of an adult parasite near the nest as an additional cue for parasitism before they reject a clutch. We found that many Little Bee-eater parents mobbed Greater Honeyguide dummies while ignoring barbet control dummies, showing that they recognized them as a threat. Surprisingly, however, neither a dummy Honeyguide nor the presence of a foreign egg, either separately or in combination, was sufficient to stimulate egg rejection.

Description

Keywords

brood parasitism, egg rejection, frontline defences, mobbing

Journal Title

Ibis (Lond 1859)

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0019-1019
1474-919X

Volume Title

157

Publisher

Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Sponsorship
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BB/J014109/1)
We are grateful for funding from a BBSRC David Phillips Fellowship to CNS, and a Marie Curie Intra-European Fellowship to NPCH.