Journal Article10.1007/S004420050671
Micro-evolutionary change and population dynamics of a brood parasite and its primary host: the intermittent arms race hypothesis
97
TL;DR: A long-term study of the interactions between a brood parasite, the great spotted cuckoo Clamator glandarius, and its primary host the magpie Pica pica demonstrated local changes in the distribution of both magpies and cuckoos and a rapid increase of rejection of both mimetic and non-mimetic model eggs by the host.
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Abstract: A long-term study of the interactions between a brood parasite, the great spotted cuckoo Clamator glandarius, and its primary host the magpie Pica pica, demonstrated local changes in the distribution of both magpies and cuckoos and a rapid increase of rejection of both mimetic and non-mimetic model eggs by the host. In rich areas, magpies improved three of their defensive mechanisms: nest density and breeding synchrony increased dramatically and rejection rate of cuckoo eggs increased more slowly. A stepwise multiple regression analysis showed that parasitism rate decreased as host density increased and cuckoo density decreased. A logistic regression analysis indicated that the probability of changes in magpie nest density in the study plots was significantly affected by the density of magpie nests during the previous year (positively) and the rejection rate of mimetic model eggs (negatively). These results are consistent with a hypothesis (the intermittent arms race hypothesis) of spatially structured cyclic changes in parasitism. During periods of parasitism, host defences continuously improve, and as a consequence, the fitness gains for parasites decrease. When host defences against parasites reach a high level, dispersing parasites have a selective advantage if they are able to emigrate to areas of low resistance. Once parasites have left an area hosts will lose their defensive adaptations due to their cost in the absence of parasitism. The scene is then set for re-colonization by great spotted cuckoos.
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Citations
Long-term coevolution between avian brood parasites and their hosts.
TL;DR: A model suggests that as an increasing number of species acquire successful resistance, other unparasitized host species become more profitable and their parasitism rate and the costs imposed by brood parasitism at the population level will increase, selecting for the evolution of host defences.
233
European Cuckoo Cuculus canorus parasitism and host's rejection behaviour in a heavily parasitized Great Reed Warbler Acrocephalus arundinaceus population
Csaba Moskát,Marcel Honza +1 more
TL;DR: An unusually high frequency (64%) of European Cuckoo Cuculus canorus parasitism was found in Great Reed Warbler Acrocephalus arundinaceus clutches in central Hungary, with great variation in both the host and the parasitic egg colour and pattern.
160
Invasion of the body snatchers: the diversity and evolution of manipulative strategies in host-parasite interactions.
Thierry Lefèvre,Shelley A. Adamo,David Biron,Dorothée Missé,David P. Hughes,David P. Hughes,Frédéric Thomas,Frédéric Thomas +7 more
TL;DR: This review uses key examples to examine the proximate mechanisms by which parasites are known to control the behaviour of their hosts, and argues that parasite-manipulated behaviours could be the result of compromises between host and parasite strategies.
159
Comparative population structure and gene flow of a brood parasite, the great spotted cuckoo (clamator glandarius), and its primary host, the magpie (pica pica).
Juan Gabriel Martínez,Juan Gabriel Martínez,Juan José Soler,Manuel Soler,Anders Pape Møller,Terry Burke +5 more
TL;DR: Gene flow seems to be extensive between nearby populations, higher for magpies than cuckoos, and especially high for magpie populations within the area of distribution of the great spotted cuckoo.
157
Egg rejection in a passerine bird: size does matter
TL;DR: Examination of egg discrimination behaviour in the yellow-browed leaf warbler, Phylloscopus humei, a presumed former host of parasitic cuckoos, shows how discrimination ability has become very strong, making it a difficult strategy for a cuckoo to defeat.
153
References
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TL;DR: To assess whether ejection would be favoured under current circumstances, the probable damage a female Redwing could cause to her own eggs by attempting to eject a cowbird egg needs to be determined.
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Growth and Development of Great Spotted Cuckoos and Their Magpie Host
Manuel Soler,Juan José Soler +1 more
TL;DR: Great Spotted Cuckoo nestlings grew faster than Magpie nestlings in unparasitized and in parasitized nests and there is some evidence that the size of the host species did not influence the growth rate of parasite nestlings.
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Micro-evolutionary change in host response to a brood parasite
TL;DR: The recent increase in the ejection response of magpies to great spotted cuckoo eggs was not due toMagpies using the abundance of cuckoos as a cue to the intensity of parasitism, and comparisons of rates of Parasitism between areas difficult without considering temporal variation.
65
•Book
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Tim R. Birkhead
- 01 Jan 1991
TL;DR: The author has studied both species of magpie in Europe and the United States, and provides, in this text, an account of their ecology and behaviour.
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