Combining personal with social information facilitates host defences and explains why cuckoos should be secretive

被引:38
作者
Thorogood, Rose [1 ]
Davies, Nicholas B. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Cambridge, Dept Zool, Downing St, Cambridge CB2 3EJ, England
基金
英国自然环境研究理事会;
关键词
REED WARBLER HOSTS; BROOD PARASITISM; CUCULUS-CANORUS; ADAPTATIONS; SCIRPACEUS;
D O I
10.1038/srep19872
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Individuals often vary defences in response to local predation or parasitism risk. But how should they assess threat levels when it pays their enemies to hide? For common cuckoo hosts, assessing parasitism risk is challenging: cuckoo eggs are mimetic and adult cuckoos are secretive and resemble hawks. Here, we show that egg rejection by reed warblers depends on combining personal and social information of local risk. We presented model cuckoos or controls at a pair's own nest (personal information of an intruder) and/or on a neighbouring territory, to which they were attracted by broadcasts of alarm calls (social information). Rejection of an experimental egg was stimulated only when hosts were alerted by both social and personal information of cuckoos. However, pairs that rejected eggs were not more likely to mob a cuckoo. Therefore, while hosts can assess risk from the sight of a cuckoo, a cuckoo cannot gauge if her egg will be accepted from host mobbing. Our results reveal how hosts respond rapidly to local variation in parasitism, and why it pays cuckoos to be secretive, both to avoid alerting their targets and to limit the spread of social information in the local host neighbourhood.
引用
收藏
页数:6
相关论文
共 32 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 1944, Aquila
[2]   Experimentally induced innovations lead to persistent culture via conformity in wild birds [J].
Aplin, Lucy M. ;
Farine, Damien R. ;
Morand-Ferron, Julie ;
Cockburn, Andrew ;
Thornton, Alex ;
Sheldon, Ben C. .
NATURE, 2015, 518 (7540) :538-541
[3]   Responses of great reed warblers Acrocephalus arundinaceus to experimental brood parasitism:: the effects of a cuckoo Cuculus canorus dummy and egg mimicry [J].
Bártol, I ;
Karcza, Z ;
Moskát, C ;
Roskaft, E ;
Kisbenedek, T .
JOURNAL OF AVIAN BIOLOGY, 2002, 33 (04) :420-425
[4]   Rapid decline of host defences in response to reduced cuckoo parasitism: behavioural flexibility of reed warblers in a changing world [J].
Brooke, MD ;
Davies, NB ;
Noble, DG .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 1998, 265 (1403) :1277-1282
[5]   Use of social over personal information enhances nest defense against avian brood parasitism [J].
Campobello, Daniela ;
Sealy, Spencer G. .
BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY, 2011, 22 (02) :422-428
[6]  
Chance E.P., 1940, Country life
[7]   Information and its use by animals in evolutionary ecology [J].
Dall, SRX ;
Giraldeau, LA ;
Olsson, O ;
McNamara, JM ;
Stephens, DW .
TRENDS IN ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION, 2005, 20 (04) :187-193
[8]   Public information:: From nosy neighbors to cultural evolution [J].
Danchin, É ;
Giraldeau, LA ;
Valone, TJ ;
Wagner, RH .
SCIENCE, 2004, 305 (5683) :487-491
[9]   Cuckoo adaptations: trickery and tuning [J].
Davies, N. B. .
JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGY, 2011, 284 (01) :1-14
[10]   Recognition errors and probability of parasitism determine whether reed warblers should accept or reject mimetic cuckoo eggs [J].
Davies, NB ;
Brooke, MDL ;
Kacelnik, A .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 1996, 263 (1372) :925-931