Hoover Jeffrey P, Robinson Scott K
Division of Ecology and Conservation Science, Illinois Natural History Survey, 1816 South Oak Street, Champaign, IL 61820, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2007 Mar 13;104(11):4479-83. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0609710104. Epub 2007 Mar 5.
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 reject parasitism. This retaliatory "mafia" behavior has been reported in one species of parasitic cuckoo but never in parasitic cowbirds. Here we present experimental evidence of mafia behavior in the brown-headed cowbird (Molothrus ater), a widely distributed North American brood parasite. We manipulated ejection of cowbird eggs and cowbird access to predator-proof nests in a common host to test experimentally for mafia behavior. When cowbird access was allowed, 56% of "ejector" nests were depredated compared with only 6% of "accepter" nests. No nests were destroyed when cowbird access was always denied or when access was denied after we removed cowbird eggs, indicating that cowbirds were responsible. Nonparasitized nests were depredated at an intermediate rate (20%) when cowbirds were allowed access, suggesting that cowbirds may occasionally "farm" hosts to create additional opportunities for parasitism. Cowbirds parasitized most (85%) renests of the hosts whose nests were depredated. Ejector nests produced 60% fewer host offspring than accepter nests because of the predatory behavior attributed to cowbirds. Widespread predatory behaviors in cowbirds could slow the evolution of rejection behaviors and further threaten populations of some of the >100 species of regular cowbird hosts.
为什么即使寄生卵和雏鸟在外观上与宿主自己的差异很大,许多宿主仍会接受代价高昂的鸟类巢寄生行为呢?科学家们认为,进化滞后或平衡可以解释这个进化之谜。然而,很少有人考虑寄生鸟类通过破坏那些将寄生卵 eject(逐出)从而拒绝寄生行为的宿主的卵或雏鸟来迫使宿主接受寄生的可能性。这种报复性的“黑手党”行为在一种寄生杜鹃中已有报道,但在寄生牛鹂中从未有过。在这里,我们展示了褐头牛鹂(Molothrus ater,一种广泛分布于北美的巢寄生鸟类)存在黑手党行为的实验证据。我们在一个常见宿主中操控了牛鹂卵的 eject(逐出)情况以及牛鹂进入防捕食巢的机会,以通过实验测试黑手党行为。当允许牛鹂进入时,56%的“逐出者”巢穴被掠夺,而“接受者”巢穴只有6%被掠夺。当始终拒绝牛鹂进入时,或者在我们移除牛鹂卵后拒绝其进入时,没有巢穴被破坏,这表明是牛鹂所为。当允许牛鹂进入时,未被寄生的巢穴以中等比例(20%)被掠夺,这表明牛鹂可能偶尔“培育”宿主以创造更多寄生机会。牛鹂寄生了大多数(85%)巢穴被掠夺的宿主的重新筑的巢。由于归因于牛鹂的捕食行为,“逐出者”巢穴产生的宿主后代比“接受者”巢穴少60%。牛鹂中广泛存在的捕食行为可能会减缓拒绝行为的进化,并进一步威胁到100多种常见牛鹂宿主中的一些物种的种群数量。