Wang Jiaojiao, Zhou Qindong, Zuo Taijun, Wang Longwu, Ma Laikun, Hou Jianhua
College of Life Science, Hebei University Baoding China.
Engineering Research Center of Ecological Safety and Conservation in Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei (Xiong'an New Area) of MOE Baoding China.
Ecol Evol. 2024 May 16;14(5):e11437. doi: 10.1002/ece3.11437. eCollection 2024 May.
In predator-prey interactions, the prey faces extreme challenges from predation, which drives the evolution of defense or anti-predator mechanisms. Compared with adult birds, nestlings are more vulnerable but not helpless. However, data on whether nestlings eavesdrop on the danger signals transmitted by other prey nestlings and the mechanisms of eavesdropping remain limited. In brood parasitism, common cuckoo () nestlings, raised by host adults who are not closely related, offer an instructive system for studying the transmission and recognition of danger signals among nestlings of different species that share special relationships. We played back the distress calls of common cuckoo nestlings to nestlings of three sympatric host species (the oriental reed warbler , which is a primary host of the common cuckoo, the reed parrotbill , an occasional host, and the vinous-throated parrotbill , which is not parasitized in the study area) to investigate whether the host nestlings reduced their begging behavior. We also quantified the degree of inhibition toward begging behavior for these nestlings. The results revealed that, in response to the distress calls, the three sympatric host species markedly suppressed their begging behavior. This response can likely be attributed to the innate response of host nestlings caused by the general characteristics of distress calls, rather than the acoustic similarity and phylogenetic relationship between host nestlings and cuckoo nestlings. Furthermore, we observed that upon hearing the distress calls of cuckoo nestlings, the oriental reed warbler nestlings exhibited the greatest reduction in the total number of calls compared to the other two host species, potentially owing to stronger predation and parasitic pressures. This study suggests that host nestlings can detect danger signals emitted by parasitic nestlings; however, further investigation is needed to determine whether they can respond to distress calls from unfamiliar nestlings in different regions.
在捕食者与猎物的相互作用中,猎物面临着来自捕食的极端挑战,这推动了防御或反捕食机制的进化。与成年鸟类相比,雏鸟更易受到攻击但并非毫无防御能力。然而,关于雏鸟是否会窃听其他猎物雏鸟发出的危险信号以及窃听机制的数据仍然有限。在巢寄生现象中,由无亲缘关系的宿主成年鸟抚养的普通杜鹃雏鸟,为研究具有特殊关系的不同物种雏鸟之间危险信号的传递和识别提供了一个有启发性的系统。我们向三种同域宿主物种(普通杜鹃的主要宿主东方大苇莺、偶尔作为宿主的棕头鸦雀以及在研究区域未被寄生的黄喉鸦雀)的雏鸟播放普通杜鹃雏鸟的遇险叫声,以研究宿主雏鸟是否会减少其乞食行为。我们还对这些雏鸟乞食行为的抑制程度进行了量化。结果显示,听到遇险叫声后,这三种同域宿主物种显著抑制了它们的乞食行为。这种反应可能归因于遇险叫声的一般特征引起的宿主雏鸟的先天反应,而非宿主雏鸟与杜鹃雏鸟之间的声学相似性和系统发育关系。此外,我们观察到,听到杜鹃雏鸟的遇险叫声后,与其他两种宿主物种相比,东方大苇莺雏鸟的叫声总数减少最多,这可能是由于更强的捕食和寄生压力所致。这项研究表明,宿主雏鸟能够检测到寄生雏鸟发出的危险信号;然而,还需要进一步研究以确定它们是否能对来自不同区域的陌生雏鸟的遇险叫声做出反应。