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首页> 外文期刊>Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology >Experimental increase in eviction load does not impose a growth cost for cuckoo chicks
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Experimental increase in eviction load does not impose a growth cost for cuckoo chicks

机译:驱逐载荷的实验增加不会施加杜鹃犬的增长成本

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Chicks of many avian brood parasites evict their hosts' eggs within 48h of hatching. This behavior eliminates competition inside the nest and is beneficial for the fitness of the parasite. Several studies have proposed that this behavior is costly for the parasitic chick and may limit opportunities for cuckoos to exploit hosts with large clutch sizes. We tested whether increased eviction effort was associated with reduced growth in cuckoo chicks by artificially increasing the clutch size of superb fairy-wrens, the main host of the Horsfield's bronze-cuckoo in Australia. Contrary to theoretical predictions, chicks that evicted a larger number of eggs did not lose mass. Instead, they had higher growth rates than chicks that evicted fewer eggs. This unexpected result suggests chicks might be able to use compensatory growth to overcome the costs of egg eviction, perhaps by increasing their begging rate after evicting more eggs. Our results, combined with previous evidence, suggest that brood parasites may not be constrained by the clutch size of their hosts, resulting in a broader set of potential hosts. Furthermore, laying larger clutches might not be an effective host defense against brood parasites.Significance statementAvian brood parasites lay their eggs in the nests of other species. Many parasitic chicks, like cuckoos, avoid competition inside the nest by evicting all the other eggs laid by the host. It is generally assumed that this innate behavior is costly for the cuckoo chick, and that evicting more eggs requires greater effort and higher physiological costs. In this study, we use the system of the superb fairy-wren and the Horsfield's bronze-cuckoo in Australia to test whether evicting more eggs results in decreased growth in parasitic cuckoos. We found no evidence to suggest that evicting more eggs compromises growth in Horsfield's bronze-cuckoos. In fact, chicks that evicted more eggs grew significantly faster than chicks that evicted fewer eggs, suggesting that chicks are able to compensate for the initial effort of evicting more eggs.
机译:许多禽育雏寄生虫的小鸡会在孵化的48小时内逐出他们的宿主鸡蛋。这种行为消除了巢内的竞争,有利于寄生虫的适应性。若干研究提出,寄生小鸡的这种行为昂贵,并且可能限制杜鹃的机会利用大型离合器尺寸利用主机。我们通过人工增加了乌克菲尔德的主要主持人的康斯菲尔德的澳大利亚的主要主持人,我们测试了是否与Cuckoo Chicks的增长减少了越来越多的逃避努力。与理论预测相反,驱逐更多鸡蛋的小鸡并没有丢失质量。相反,他们的增长率比鸡蛋较少的小鸡更高。这种意想不到的结果表明小鸡可能能够使用补偿性增长来克服鸡蛋驱逐的成本,也许在逐渐增加他们在逐渐增加卵子后的乞讨率。我们的结果与以前的证据相结合,表明育雏寄生虫可能不会受到其宿主的离合器尺寸的限制,从而导致更广泛的潜在主体。此外,铺设较大的离合器可能不是针对育雏寄生虫的有效主体防护。尊严的ConleaseVian Brood Parasites将鸡蛋放在其他物种的巢中。许多寄生小鸡,如咕咕咕噜,避免通过驱逐主机铺设的所有其他鸡蛋在巢中竞争。通常假设这种天生的行为对于杜鹃小鸡而言,越来越多的鸡蛋需要更大的努力和更高的生理成本。在这项研究中,我们使用Superb童话和Horsfield的青铜杜鹃的系统来测试逐渐降低更多的鸡蛋是否导致寄生覆盆子的增长降低。我们发现没有证据表明,在霍尔菲尔德的铜咕咕咕咕案中逐渐促使更多的鸡蛋妥协。事实上,驱逐更多鸡蛋的小鸡比驱逐鸡蛋的小鸡更快地增长,表明小鸡能够弥补逐步逐步弥补更多鸡蛋的最初努力。

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