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Comparison of digestive efficiency in the parasitic great spotted cuckoo and its magpie host nestlings
Authors:Manuel Soler  Liesbeth De Neve  Tomás Pérez‐Contreras  Luis A Rubio
Institution:1. Departamento de Zoología, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Granada, , E‐18071 Granada, Spain;2. Grupo Coevolución, Unidad Asociada al CSIC, Universidad de Granada, , Granada, Spain;3. Department of Biology, Terrestrial Ecology Unit, Ghent University, , B‐9000 Gent, Belgium;4. Estación Experimental del Zaidín (INAN, CSIC), , 18008 Granada, Spain
Abstract:Altricial nestlings are under strong selection pressures to optimize digestive efficiency because this is one of the main factors affecting nestling growth and survival. Bird species vary in their ability to assimilate different nutrients and current theory predicts that nestlings should also be able to adjust their nutritional physiology to feeding frequency. Variation in parental provisioning to nestlings would select for flexibility in nestling digestive physiology, which would allow maximization of nutrient assimilation. In the present study, by making use of a brood parasite–host study system in which great spotted cuckoo nestlings (Clamator glandarius) are reared by magpie (Pica pica) host foster parents when sharing the nest with host nestlings, we tested several predictions of the adaptive digestive efficiency paradigm. A hand‐feeding experiment was employed in which we fed both great spotted cuckoo and magpie nestlings with exactly the same diet simulating one food abundance period and one food deprivation period. The results obtained show that cuckoo nestlings ingested more food, gained significantly more weight during the abundance period, and assimilated a higher proportion of the ingested food than magpie nestlings. These results demonstrate for the first time that cuckoo nestlings enjoy digestive adaptations that favour a rapid processing of the ingested food, thereby maximizing their intake rate but without decreasing digestive efficiency. © 2013 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2014, 111 , 280–289.
Keywords:body mass gain  body mass loss  brood parasitism  Clamator glandarius  food intake  Pica pica
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