| Literature DB >> 29985476 |
Alfredo Attisano1, Nozomu J Sato2, Keita D Tanaka3, Yuji Okahisa4, Ralph Kuehn5,6, Roman Gula7, Keisuke Ueda4, Jörn Theuerkauf7.
Abstract
Mimicry by avian brood parasites favours uniformity over variation within a breeding attempt as host defence against parasitism. In a cuckoo-host system from New Caledonia, the arms race resulted in both host (Gerygone flavolateralis) and parasite (Chalcites lucidus) having nestlings of two discrete skin colour phenotypes, bright and dark. In our study sites, host nestlings occurred in monomorphic and polymorphic broods, whereas cuckoo nestlings only occurred in the bright morph. Irrespective of their brood colour, host parents recognised and ejected parasite nestlings but never ejected their own. We investigated whether host parents visually recognised their own nestlings by using colour, luminance and pattern of multiple body regions. We found that the parasite mimicked multiple visual features of both host morphs and that the visual difference between host morphs was larger than the difference between the parasite and the mimicked host morph. Visual discrimination alone may result in higher chances of recognition errors in polymorphic than in monomorphic host broods. Host parents may rely on additional sensorial cues, not only visual, to assess nestling identity. Nestling polymorphism may be a trace of evolutionary past and may only have a marginal role in true-recognition of nestlings in the arms race in New Caledonia.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29985476 PMCID: PMC6037703 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-28710-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Total number of Fan-tailed Gerygone broods, nests parasitised by Shining Bronze-cuckoo, number of cuckoo hatchlings and number of parasite nestling ejection events observed during the period 2011/12-2015/16 and 2017/18.
| Brood type | Number of broods | Parasitised nests | Cuckoo nestlings | Ejection events** |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bright | 66 | 7 | 7 | 7 |
| Dark | 13 | 3 | 3 | 3 |
| Polymorphic | 8 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| unknown brood type* | 104 | 19 | 4 | 4 |
| 191 | 30 | 15 | 15 |
*We could not determine the brood phenotype due to predation, hatching failure or accidental damage of the eggs. **In 11 naturally parasitised nests (5 bright monomorphic broods, 2 dark monomorphic, 1 polymorphic and 3 broods of unknown nestling composition) and in 4 nests (2 bright, 1 dark and 1 unknown) to which we introduced artificially incubated cuckoo nestlings.
Figure 1Colour (a) and luminance (b) just noticeable differences (JND, mean ± 95% CI). Horizontal bars with P values indicate pairwise comparisons between groups or regions. Higher JND values indicates higher colour differences in the eyes of host parents between nestling types in each group. Sample size (number of comparisons) for and regions are Bright-Dark = 60, Cuckoo-Bright = 45, Cuckoo-Dark = 12 and for the region are Bright-Dark = 27, Cuckoo-Bright = 18, Cuckoo-Dark = 6.
Figure 2Regressions lines (with 95% CI as shaded area) of skin luminance in relation to age for the bright (solid line) and dark (dashed line) morphs of Fan-tailed Gerygone nestlings.
Figure 3Mean pattern differences (pattern size, spacing and contrast) with 95% CI between nestling types in each group for each region of interest. Horizontal bars with P values indicate pairwise comparisons between groups or regions.