Jones Todd M, Benson Thomas J, Hauber Mark E, Ward Michael P
Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, USA.
Illinois Natural History Survey, Prairie Research Institute, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Champaign, IL, USA.
Oecologia. 2022 Apr;198(4):981-993. doi: 10.1007/s00442-022-05167-y. Epub 2022 Apr 18.
The antagonistic arms races between obligate brood parasites and their hosts provide critical insights into coevolutionary processes and constraints on the evolution of life history strategies. In avian brood parasites-a model system for examining host-parasite dynamics-research has primarily focused on the egg and nestling stage, while far less is known about the behavior and ecology of fledgling and juvenile brood parasites. To provide greater insights into the post-fledging period of generalist brood parasites, we used handheld and automated telemetry systems to examine the behavior and survival of fledgling brown-headed cowbirds (Molothrus ater). Our host community-wide analysis (data on cowbirds fledged from different host species were pooled) shows that fledgling cowbirds' follow patterns of movement and survival found across the post-fledging literature on parental passerine species. Cowbird fledgling survival was lowest during the first 3 days post-fledging, whereas daily rates of survival neared 100% after about 16 days post-fledging. Cowbird daytime post-fledging activity rates, perch heights, and distance from the natal area all increased with fledging age and young generally gained independence from host parents at 3-4 weeks post-fledging, with approximately the same latency as has been observed in studies on fledglings of cowbird host species. Our research demonstrates how automated telemetry systems can overcome past methodological limitations in post-fledging research and provides an important foundation for future studies examining adaptations that cowbirds and other brood parasites use to exploit hosts during the post-fledging period.
专性巢寄生者与其宿主之间的对抗性军备竞赛为协同进化过程以及对生活史策略进化的限制提供了关键见解。在鸟类巢寄生(一种用于研究宿主 - 寄生者动态的模型系统)中,研究主要集中在卵和雏鸟阶段,而对于刚 fledgling 和幼年巢寄生者的行为和生态学了解甚少。为了更深入了解泛性巢寄生者 fledging 后的时期,我们使用手持式和自动遥测系统来研究 fledgling 褐头牛鹂(Molothrus ater)的行为和生存情况。我们在整个宿主群落范围内的分析(汇总了从不同宿主物种 fledged 的牛鹂的数据)表明,fledgling 牛鹂的移动和生存模式与关于亲代雀形目物种 fledging 后文献中发现的模式一致。牛鹂 fledgling 在 fledging 后的前 3 天生存率最低,而在 fledging 约 16 天后,每日生存率接近 100%。牛鹂 fledging 后的白天活动率、栖息高度以及与出生地的距离都随着 fledging 年龄的增加而增加,幼鸟通常在 fledging 后 3 - 4 周从宿主父母那里获得独立,潜伏期与对牛鹂宿主物种 fledgling 的研究中观察到的大致相同。我们的研究展示了自动遥测系统如何能够克服过去 fledging 后研究中的方法学限制,并为未来研究牛鹂和其他巢寄生者在 fledging 后时期利用宿主的适应性提供了重要基础。 (注:这里“fledgling”在生物学语境下有“刚会飞的幼鸟”之意,在译文中为保持专业性未进行意译替换,可能影响一定可读性,但符合专业文献要求。)