Soler Manuel, Ruiz-Raya Francisco, Roncalli Gianluca, Ibáñez-Álamo Juan Diego
Departamento de Zoología, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Granada, Granada, Spain.
Behavioral and Physiological Ecology group, Centre for Ecological and Evolutionary Studies, University of Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands.
PLoS One. 2017 Feb 7;12(2):e0166283. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0166283. eCollection 2017.
Brood parasitism frequently leads to a total loss of host fitness, which selects for the evolution of defensive traits in host species. Experimental studies have demonstrated that recognition and rejection of the parasite egg is the most common and efficient defence used by host species. Egg-recognition experiments have advanced our knowledge of the evolutionary and coevolutionary implications of egg recognition and rejection. However, our understanding of the proximate mechanisms underlying both processes remains poor. Egg rejection is a complex behavioural process consisting of three stages: egg recognition, the decision whether or not to reject the putative parasitic egg and the act of ejection itself. We have used the blackbird (Turdus merula) as a model species to explore the relationship between egg recognition and the act of egg ejection. We have manipulated the two main characteristics of parasitic eggs affecting egg ejection in this grasp-ejector species: the degree of colour mimicry (mimetic and non-mimetic, which mainly affects the egg-recognition stage of the egg-rejection process) and egg size (small, medium and large, which affects the decision to eject), while maintaining a control group of non-parasitized nests. The behaviour of the female when confronted with an experimental egg was filmed using a video camera. Our results show that egg touching is an indication of egg recognition and demonstrate that blackbirds recognized (i.e., touched) non-mimetic experimental eggs significantly more than mimetic eggs. However, twenty per cent of the experimental eggs were touched but not subsequently ejected, which confirms that egg recognition does not necessarily mean egg ejection and that accepting parasitic eggs, at least sometimes, is the consequence of acceptance decisions. Regarding proximate mechanisms, our results show that the delay in egg ejection is not only due to recognition problems as usually suggested, given that experimental eggs are not touched significantly more often. Thus, the delay in egg ejection is mainly the consequence of a delay in the decision to eject, probably triggered by mechanical constraints imposed by eggs that are harder to eject (i.e. larger). Our results offer important information on the relationships between recognition and ejection and contribute to a better understanding of host defences against brood parasites.
巢寄生常常导致宿主适应性的完全丧失,这促使宿主物种进化出防御特征。实验研究表明,识别并拒绝寄生卵是宿主物种最常见且有效的防御方式。卵识别实验增进了我们对卵识别与拒绝在进化及协同进化方面影响的认识。然而,我们对这两个过程背后的近因机制仍了解不足。卵拒绝是一个复杂的行为过程,包括三个阶段:卵识别、决定是否拒绝疑似寄生卵以及实际的逐出行为本身。我们以乌鸫(欧歌鸫)作为模式物种,来探究卵识别与卵逐出行为之间的关系。在这个抓取-逐出型物种中,我们操控了影响卵逐出的寄生卵的两个主要特征:颜色拟态程度(拟态和非拟态,主要影响卵拒绝过程中的卵识别阶段)和卵大小(小、中、大,影响逐出的决定),同时设置了未被寄生巢穴的对照组。用摄像机拍摄雌鸟面对实验卵时的行为。我们的结果表明,触碰卵是卵识别的一个指标,并且证明乌鸫识别(即触碰)非拟态实验卵的次数显著多于拟态卵。然而,20%的实验卵被触碰但随后并未被逐出,这证实了卵识别并不一定意味着卵逐出,而且接受寄生卵,至少有时,是接受决定的结果。关于近因机制,我们的结果表明,卵逐出延迟不仅如通常所认为的那样是由于识别问题,因为实验卵并未更频繁地被触碰。因此,卵逐出延迟主要是逐出决定延迟的结果,可能是由更难逐出的卵(即更大的卵)所施加的机械限制引发的。我们的结果提供了关于识别与逐出之间关系的重要信息,有助于更好地理解宿主对巢寄生者的防御。