TY - JOUR
T1 - Ontogenetic effects of brood parasitism by the Brown-headed Cowbird on host offspring
AU - Jones, Todd M.
AU - Di Giovanni, Alexander J.
AU - Hauber, Mark E.
AU - Ward, Michael P.
N1 - This research was funded through Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration from the Illinois Department of Natural Resources and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (project W-154-R), and research grants from the Illinois Ornithological Society, Association of Field Ornithologists, Wilson Ornithological Society, American Ornithological Society, The North American Bluebird Society, and Inland Bird Banding Association. This work was also supported by the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture, Hatch project ILLU-875-963. Additional support was provided by a National Science Foundation award and a Humbolt Foundation Prize at the University of Bielefeld (to Mark E. Hauber). This work would not be possible without the dedicated efforts of Nicole Suckow, Kara Winter, Abby Riggs, Nisarg Shah, Mia Larrieu, Michael Miller, Evalynn Trumbo, and Ryan Leeson. We are grateful to Kennekuk Cove County Park for access to our study site and help in the field and to the Middlefork Audubon Society for access to nest boxes. Animal care and use were approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, protocol no. 18221. All capture and banding practices were covered under Master Bander Permit no. 23875 (Todd M. Jones).
Humbolt Foundation Prize, University of Bielefeld; U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Grant/Award Number: W‐154‐R; USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture, Grant/Award Number: ILLU‐875‐963; Illinois Department of Natural Resources; Illinois Ornithological Society; Association of Field Ornithologists; Wilson Ornithological Society; American Ornithological Society; North American Bluebird Society; Inland Bird Banding Association; National Science Foundation Funding information
This research was funded through Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration from the Illinois Department of Natural Resources and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (project W‐154‐R), and research grants from the Illinois Ornithological Society, Association of Field Ornithologists, Wilson Ornithological Society, American Ornithological Society, The North American Bluebird Society, and Inland Bird Banding Association. This work was also supported by the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture, Hatch project ILLU‐875‐963. Additional support was provided by a National Science Foundation award and a Humbolt Foundation Prize at the University of Bielefeld (to Mark E. Hauber). This work would not be possible without the dedicated efforts of Nicole Suckow, Kara Winter, Abby Riggs, Nisarg Shah, Mia Larrieu, Michael Miller, Evalynn Trumbo, and Ryan Leeson. We are grateful to Kennekuk Cove County Park for access to our study site and help in the field and to the Middlefork Audubon Society for access to nest boxes. Animal care and use were approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee at the University of Illinois at Urbana‐Champaign, protocol no. 18221. All capture and banding practices were covered under Master Bander Permit no. 23875 (Todd M. Jones).
PY - 2023/3
Y1 - 2023/3
N2 - Nest-sharer avian brood parasites do not evict or otherwise kill host chicks, but instead inflict a range of negative effects on their nestmates that are mediated by interactions between the parasite and host life history traits. Although many of the negative fitness effects of avian brood parasitism are well documented across diverse host species, there remains a paucity of studies that have examined the impacts of parasitism across the entirety of host ontogeny (i.e., from when an egg is laid until independence). More specifically, few studies have examined the impact of brood parasitism on the pre- and post-fledging development, physiology, behavior, and survival of host offspring. To help fill this knowledge gap, we assessed the effects of brood parasitism by Brown-headed Cowbirds (Molothrus ater) across the ontogeny (incubation, nestling, and post-fledging period) of nine sympatrically breeding host species in central Illinois, USA; due to sample sizes, impacts on the post-fledging period were only examined in two of the nine species. Specifically, we examined the impact of brood parasitism on ontogenetic markers including the embryonic heart rate, hatching rate, nestling period length, nest survival, and offspring growth and development. Additionally, in species in which we found negative impacts of cowbird parasitism on host nestmate ontogeny, we examined whether the difference in adult size between parasites and their hosts and their hatching asynchrony positively predicted variation in host costs across these focal taxa. We found that costs of cowbird parasitism were most severe during early nesting stages (reduction in the host clutch or brood size) and were predicted negatively by host size and positively by incubation length. In contrast, we only found limited costs of cowbird parasitism on other stages of host ontogeny; critically, post-fledging survival did not differ between host offspring that fledged alongside cowbirds and those that did not. Our findings (i) highlight the direct costs of cowbird parasitism on host fitness, (ii) provide evidence for when (the stage) those costs are manifested, and (iii) may help to explain why many anti-cowbird defenses of hosts have evolved for protection from parasitism during the laying and incubation stages.
AB - Nest-sharer avian brood parasites do not evict or otherwise kill host chicks, but instead inflict a range of negative effects on their nestmates that are mediated by interactions between the parasite and host life history traits. Although many of the negative fitness effects of avian brood parasitism are well documented across diverse host species, there remains a paucity of studies that have examined the impacts of parasitism across the entirety of host ontogeny (i.e., from when an egg is laid until independence). More specifically, few studies have examined the impact of brood parasitism on the pre- and post-fledging development, physiology, behavior, and survival of host offspring. To help fill this knowledge gap, we assessed the effects of brood parasitism by Brown-headed Cowbirds (Molothrus ater) across the ontogeny (incubation, nestling, and post-fledging period) of nine sympatrically breeding host species in central Illinois, USA; due to sample sizes, impacts on the post-fledging period were only examined in two of the nine species. Specifically, we examined the impact of brood parasitism on ontogenetic markers including the embryonic heart rate, hatching rate, nestling period length, nest survival, and offspring growth and development. Additionally, in species in which we found negative impacts of cowbird parasitism on host nestmate ontogeny, we examined whether the difference in adult size between parasites and their hosts and their hatching asynchrony positively predicted variation in host costs across these focal taxa. We found that costs of cowbird parasitism were most severe during early nesting stages (reduction in the host clutch or brood size) and were predicted negatively by host size and positively by incubation length. In contrast, we only found limited costs of cowbird parasitism on other stages of host ontogeny; critically, post-fledging survival did not differ between host offspring that fledged alongside cowbirds and those that did not. Our findings (i) highlight the direct costs of cowbird parasitism on host fitness, (ii) provide evidence for when (the stage) those costs are manifested, and (iii) may help to explain why many anti-cowbird defenses of hosts have evolved for protection from parasitism during the laying and incubation stages.
KW - brood parasitism
KW - cowbirds
KW - host–parasite systems
KW - ontogeny
KW - post-fledging
KW - songbirds
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U2 - 10.1002/ecy.3925
DO - 10.1002/ecy.3925
M3 - Article
C2 - 36423935
AN - SCOPUS:85145865523
SN - 0012-9658
VL - 104
JO - Ecology
JF - Ecology
IS - 3
M1 - e3925
ER -