Back to Search Start Over

Social parasitism as an alternative reproductive tactic in a cooperatively breeding cuckoo

Authors :
Riehl, Christina
Strong, Meghan J.
Source :
Nature. March, 2019, Vol. 567 Issue 7746, p96, 4 p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Cooperatively nesting birds are vulnerable to social parasites that lay their eggs in host nests but provide no parental care.sup.1-4. Most previous research has focused on the co-evolutionary arms race between host defences and the parasites that attempt to circumvent them.sup.5-9, but it remains unclear why females sometimes cooperate and sometimes parasitize, and how parasitic tactics arise in cooperative systems.sup.10-12. Here we show that cooperative and parasitic reproductive strategies result in approximately equal fitness pay-offs in the greater ani (Crotophaga major), a long-lived tropical cuckoo, using an 11-year dataset and comprehensive genetic data that enable comparisons of the life-histories of individual females. We found that most females in the population nested cooperatively at the beginning of the breeding season; however, of those birds that had their first nests destroyed, a minority subsequently acted as reproductive parasites. The tendency to parasitize was highly repeatable, which indicates individual specialization. Across years, the fitness pay-offs of the two strategies were approximately equal: females who never parasitized (a 'pure cooperative' strategy) laid larger clutches and fledged more young from their own nests than did birds that both nested and parasitized (a 'mixed' strategy). Our results suggest that the success of parasites is constrained by reproductive trade-offs as well as by host defences, and illustrate how cooperative and parasitic tactics can coexist stably in the same population. Mixed-effects logistic regression modelling of a dataset of individual reproductive behaviours shows fitness pay-offs of cooperative versus mixed cooperative and parasitic reproductive strategies are approximately equal in female greater anis (Crotophaga major).<br />Author(s): Christina Riehl [sup.1] , Meghan J. Strong [sup.1] Author Affiliations: (1) Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, USA Main Conspecific brood parasitism--in which a female lays [...]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836
Volume :
567
Issue :
7746
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.577440838
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-019-0981-1