Pöysä Hannu, Pesonen Mauri
Finnish Game and Fisheries Research Institute, Joensuu Game and Fisheries Research, Yliopistokatu 6, FIN-80100 Joensuu, Finland.
Am Nat. 2007 Jan;169(1):94-104. doi: 10.1086/509943. Epub 2006 Nov 21.
Conspecific brood parasitism (CBP) is a taxonomically widespread reproductive tactic. One of the earliest hypotheses put forward to explain the evolution of CBP was "risk spreading"; that is, by laying eggs in more than one nest, parasites may increase the likelihood that at least one offspring will survive to independence. However, the risk spreading hypothesis, based on the assumptions of random nest predation and random selection of target nests by parasites, was theoretically refuted soon after its appearance. New results from the common goldeneye (Bucephala clangula) have revealed that nests are not predated at random and that parasites preferentially lay in safe nests. By taking into account these findings and by modifying accordingly the basic assumptions of the earlier model that refuted the risk spreading hypothesis, we built a model to address the role of nest predation in the evolution of CBP. Model simulations revealed that the selective advantage of parasitic laying, related to nest predation, is much higher than previously thought. Furthermore, the invasion probability of parasitic tactic when initially rare was reasonably high within our model framework. We show that the use of risk assessing, instead of random risk spreading, makes parasitic laying evolutionarily advantageous.
同种巢寄生(CBP)是一种在分类学上广泛存在的繁殖策略。最早提出的解释CBP进化的假说是“风险分散”;也就是说,通过在多个巢中产卵,寄生者可能会增加至少有一个后代存活至独立的可能性。然而,基于随机巢捕食和寄生者随机选择目标巢的假设的风险分散假说,在其出现后不久就从理论上被驳斥了。普通秋沙鸭(Bucephala clangula)的新研究结果表明,巢并非被随机捕食,并且寄生者优先在安全的巢中产卵。通过考虑这些发现并相应地修改早期驳斥风险分散假说的模型的基本假设,我们构建了一个模型来探讨巢捕食在CBP进化中的作用。模型模拟表明,与巢捕食相关的寄生产卵的选择优势比以前认为的要高得多。此外,在我们的模型框架内,寄生策略在最初稀少时的入侵概率相当高。我们表明,使用风险评估而非随机风险分散,会使寄生产卵在进化上具有优势。