Red-crested cardinal defences against shiny cowbird parasitism

Avian brood parasites reduce the reproductive success of the host, which favours the evolution of antiparasitic defences, such as aggression towards parasites or rejection of their eggs. The red-crested cardinal, Paroaria coronata, is a potential good-quality host of the shiny cowbird, Molothrus bon...

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Autores principales: Segura, L.N., Reboreda, J.C.
Formato: JOUR
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Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00057959_v149_n3-4_p325_Segura
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spelling todo:paper_00057959_v149_n3-4_p325_Segura2023-10-03T14:03:33Z Red-crested cardinal defences against shiny cowbird parasitism Segura, L.N. Reboreda, J.C. antiparasitic defences brood parasitism egg rejection Molothrus bonariensis Paroaria coronata Aves Cardinalis Molothrus bonariensis Paroaria coronata Avian brood parasites reduce the reproductive success of the host, which favours the evolution of antiparasitic defences, such as aggression towards parasites or rejection of their eggs. The red-crested cardinal, Paroaria coronata, is a potential good-quality host of the shiny cowbird, Molothrus bonariensis. However, the frequency of cowbird parasitism in cardinal nests is very low and there are no records of this host raising parasite's chicks, which suggest that it may have evolved effective antiparasitic defences. We studied cardinal antiparasitic defences by: (1) presenting dummy models of a female cowbird and non-predator and predator control species to nests during laying and incubation, and (2) conducting experiments of artificial parasitism with natural cowbird eggs of different morphs and conspecific eggs during laying and early and late incubation. We found that: (1) the frequency of cowbird parasitism in cardinal nests was 7%, (2) cardinals did not exhibit aggressive behaviours towards cowbird or nonpredator models but responded aggressively towards a predator model, (3) they rejected parasite eggs in 98.5% of the cases (mostly through egg ejection), but conspecific eggs in only 6% of the cases, (4) there were no costs (breakage or ejection of their own eggs) associated with ejection of the parasite's eggs, and (5) a relatively low frequency of parasitism is enough selection pressure to maintain egg rejection at a high level. The antagonistic expression of antiparasitic defences in red-crested cardinals suggests that they may have lost the behaviour of aggression towards the parasite as a result of associated costs. © 2012 Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden. Fil:Segura, L.N. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. Fil:Reboreda, J.C. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00057959_v149_n3-4_p325_Segura
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic antiparasitic defences
brood parasitism
egg rejection
Molothrus bonariensis
Paroaria coronata
Aves
Cardinalis
Molothrus bonariensis
Paroaria coronata
spellingShingle antiparasitic defences
brood parasitism
egg rejection
Molothrus bonariensis
Paroaria coronata
Aves
Cardinalis
Molothrus bonariensis
Paroaria coronata
Segura, L.N.
Reboreda, J.C.
Red-crested cardinal defences against shiny cowbird parasitism
topic_facet antiparasitic defences
brood parasitism
egg rejection
Molothrus bonariensis
Paroaria coronata
Aves
Cardinalis
Molothrus bonariensis
Paroaria coronata
description Avian brood parasites reduce the reproductive success of the host, which favours the evolution of antiparasitic defences, such as aggression towards parasites or rejection of their eggs. The red-crested cardinal, Paroaria coronata, is a potential good-quality host of the shiny cowbird, Molothrus bonariensis. However, the frequency of cowbird parasitism in cardinal nests is very low and there are no records of this host raising parasite's chicks, which suggest that it may have evolved effective antiparasitic defences. We studied cardinal antiparasitic defences by: (1) presenting dummy models of a female cowbird and non-predator and predator control species to nests during laying and incubation, and (2) conducting experiments of artificial parasitism with natural cowbird eggs of different morphs and conspecific eggs during laying and early and late incubation. We found that: (1) the frequency of cowbird parasitism in cardinal nests was 7%, (2) cardinals did not exhibit aggressive behaviours towards cowbird or nonpredator models but responded aggressively towards a predator model, (3) they rejected parasite eggs in 98.5% of the cases (mostly through egg ejection), but conspecific eggs in only 6% of the cases, (4) there were no costs (breakage or ejection of their own eggs) associated with ejection of the parasite's eggs, and (5) a relatively low frequency of parasitism is enough selection pressure to maintain egg rejection at a high level. The antagonistic expression of antiparasitic defences in red-crested cardinals suggests that they may have lost the behaviour of aggression towards the parasite as a result of associated costs. © 2012 Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden.
format JOUR
author Segura, L.N.
Reboreda, J.C.
author_facet Segura, L.N.
Reboreda, J.C.
author_sort Segura, L.N.
title Red-crested cardinal defences against shiny cowbird parasitism
title_short Red-crested cardinal defences against shiny cowbird parasitism
title_full Red-crested cardinal defences against shiny cowbird parasitism
title_fullStr Red-crested cardinal defences against shiny cowbird parasitism
title_full_unstemmed Red-crested cardinal defences against shiny cowbird parasitism
title_sort red-crested cardinal defences against shiny cowbird parasitism
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00057959_v149_n3-4_p325_Segura
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