Habitat selection for parasite-free space by hosts of parasitic cowbirds
نویسندگان
چکیده
Choice of breeding habitat can have a major impact on fitness. Sensitivity of habitat choice to environmental cues predicting reproductive success, such as density of harmful enemy species, should be favored by natural selection. Yet, experimental tests of this idea are in short supply. Brown-headed cowbirds Molothrus ater commonly reduce reproductive success of a wide diversity of birds by parasitizing their nests. We used song playbacks to simulate high cowbird density and tested whether cowbird hosts avoid such areas in habitat selection. Host species that made settlement decisions during manipulations were significantly less abundant in the cowbird treatment as a group. In contrast, hosts that settled before manipulations started and non-host species did not respond to treatments. These results suggest that hosts of cowbirds can use vocal cues to assess parasitism risk among potential habitat patches and avoid high risk habitats. This can affect community structure by affecting habitat choices of species with differential vulnerability.
منابع مشابه
Individual patterns of habitat and nest-site use by hosts promote transgenerational transmission of avian brood parasitism status.
Brood parasitic birds impose variable fitness costs upon their hosts by causing the partial or complete loss of the hosts' own brood. Growing evidence from multiple avian host-parasite taxa indicates that exposure of individual hosts to parasitism is not necessarily random and varies with habitat use, nest-site selection, age or other phenotypic attributes. For instance, nonrandom patterns of b...
متن کاملHost-parasite Relationships of the Brown-headed Cowbird in a Prairie Habitat of West-central Kansas
The parasitic nature of the Brown-headed Cowbird (Molothrus ater) is believed to have developed as a result of its association with the bison (Bison bison). Cowbirds subsisted on insects flushed by herds of bison, however, the nomadic nature of the bison made it impossible for cowbirds to remain with the herd and simultaneously perform nesting activities. Theoretically the evolution of parasiti...
متن کاملAntiparasitic defenses in hosts of South American cowbirds
The cowbirds (Molothrus, Icteridae) are a monophyletic group that includes five extant brood-parasitic species. The Screaming (M. rufoaxillaris), Giant (M. oryzivorus) and Shiny (M. bonariensis) cowbirds range mostly in South America. Screaming and Shiny cowbirds are the ancestral and most recent species of the clade, respectively, therefore, differing in how long they have coevolved with their...
متن کاملRetaliatory mafia behavior by a parasitic cowbird favors host acceptance of parasitic eggs.
Why do many hosts accept costly avian brood parasitism even when parasitic eggs and nestlings differ dramatically in appearance from their own? Scientists argue that evolutionary lag or equilibrium can explain this evolutionary enigma. Few, however, consider the potential of parasitic birds to enforce acceptance by destroying eggs or nestlings of hosts that eject parasitic eggs and thereby reje...
متن کاملLong-distance Commuting by Brown-headed Cowbirds in New Mexico
The Brown-headed Cowbird (Molothrus ater) is a widespread brood parasite that has attracted considerable recent attention as a possible threat to forestdwelling songbirds (e.g. Finch 1991, Robinson et al. 1995). Cowbirds are unusual among passerines in that their parasitic nature allows some populations to have spatially and temporally separate breeding and feeding activities (Rothstein et al. ...
متن کامل