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      Experiments on egg discrimination in two North American corvids: further evidence for retention of egg ejection

      , ,
      Canadian Journal of Zoology
      Canadian Science Publishing

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          Recognition Errors and Probability of Parasitism Determine Whether Reed Warblers Should Accept or Reject Mimetic Cuckoo Eggs

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            Egg recognition and counting reduce costs of avian conspecific brood parasitism.

            Mark Lyon (2003)
            Birds parasitized by interspecific brood parasites often adopt defences based on egg recognition but such behaviours are puzzlingly rare in species parasitized by members of the same species. Here I show that conspecific egg recognition is frequent, accurate and used in three defences that reduce the high costs of conspecific brood parasitism in American coots. Hosts recognized and rejected many parasitic eggs, reducing the fitness costs of parasitism by half. Recognition without rejection also occurred and some hosts banished parasitic eggs to inferior outer incubation positions. Clutch size comparisons revealed that females combine egg recognition and counting to make clutch size decisions--by counting their own eggs, while ignoring distinctive parasitic eggs, females avoid a maladaptive clutch size reduction. This is clear evidence that female birds use visual rather than tactile cues to regulate their clutch sizes, and provides a rare example of the ecological and evolutionary context of counting in animals.
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              Rapid decline of host defences in response to reduced cuckoo parasitism: behavioural flexibility of reed warblers in a changing world

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Canadian Journal of Zoology
                Can. J. Zool.
                Canadian Science Publishing
                0008-4301
                1480-3283
                September 2004
                September 2004
                : 82
                : 9
                : 1399-1407
                Article
                10.1139/z04-118
                f5f822a4-4bea-4cc1-af14-35ec60177dec
                © 2004

                http://www.nrcresearchpress.com/page/about/CorporateTextAndDataMining

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