Ecology and Evolution (Apr 2024)

Video evidence that cuckoos farm their hosts by ejecting nestlings

  • Jinggang Zhang,
  • Peter Santema,
  • Jianqiang Li,
  • Wenhong Deng,
  • Bart Kempenaers

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.11196
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 4
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract When host nests are scarce, avian brood parasites would benefit from behaviours that increase the availability of suitable nests. Several studies reported ejection of host nestlings from nests by brood parasites; however, whether brood parasites do so to induce the host to re‐nest and thus increase opportunities for future parasitism (i.e. ‘farming’ behaviour) remains unclear. Here, we report observational evidence of farming behaviour by a common cuckoo Cuculus canorus female in a Daurian redstart Phoenicurus auroreus population: (1) the cuckoo destroyed a host nest by ejecting all nestlings, (2) the host then produced a new nest and (3) the cuckoo successfully parasitized the replacement nest. We suggest that farming behaviour may be more common, but often goes undetected because it requires intense nest monitoring.

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