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1.
Social parasites exploit the colony resources of social insects. Some of them exploit the host colony as a food resource or as a shelter whereas other species also exploit the brood care behavior of their social host. Some of these species have even lost the worker caste and rely completely on the host''s worker force to rear their offspring. To avoid host defenses and bypass their recognition code, these social parasites have developed several sophisticated chemical infiltration strategies. These infiltration strategies have been highly studied in several hymenopterans. Once a social parasite has successfully entered a host nest and integrated its social system, its emerging offspring still face the same challenge of avoiding host recognition. However, the strategy used by the offspring to survive within the host nest without being killed is still poorly documented. In cuckoo bumblebees, the parasite males completely lack the morphological and chemical adaptations to social parasitism that the females possess. Moreover, young parasite males exhibit an early production of species-specific cephalic secretions, used as sexual pheromones. Host workers might thus be able to recognize them. Here we used a bumblebee host-social parasite system to test the hypothesis that social parasite male offspring exhibit a chemical defense strategy to escape from host aggression during their intranidal life. Using behavioral assays, we showed that extracts from the heads of young cuckoo bumblebee males contain a repellent odor that prevents parasite males from being attacked by host workers. We also show that social parasitism reduces host worker aggressiveness and helps parasite offspring acceptance.  相似文献   

2.
The reproductive biology and morphology of six polystiliferous and onemonostiliferous species of pelagic nemerteans was studied in specimensrecently collected off California. Depth distributions for these specimensranged from 250 m to 3250 m, with most specimens obtained between 700 m and1750 m. Length of sexually mature individuals ranged from 2 mm for themonostiliferan to 61 mm for a male Phallonemertes cf. murrayi. Among P. cf.murrayi and Nectonemertes cf. mirabilis, which yielded the largest specimensstudied, mature males were larger than mature females and mature animalswere larger than those in which gonads were not apparent. Females typicallyoutnumbered males, although N. cf. mirabilis approached a 1:1 sex ratio. Inthe polystiliferans studied by light microscopy, accessory ovarian cellsappeared to translocate yolk or yolk precursors to oocytes via cytoplasmicbridges, a mechanism typically associated with nurse cells and notpreviously reported from nemerteans. Mature oocytes 0.5–1 mm indiameter were common, making them very large compared to those of benthicnemerteans. Sperm possessed elongated heads and nuclei. In general, thepelagic nemerteans studied appeared: a) to produce relatively few maturegametes at a time, b) spawn in close proximity to each other, c) undergoiteroparous reproduction, and d) display moderately long-lived life cycles.In addition, data for P. cf. murrayi and possibly N. cf. mirabilisdemonstrates potential seasonal peaks in reproductive activity.  相似文献   

3.
Hoover JP  Reetz MJ 《Oecologia》2006,149(1):165-173
Interspecific brood parasitism in birds presents a special problem for the host because the parasitic offspring exploit their foster parents, causing them to invest more energy in their current reproductive effort. Nestling brown-headed cowbirds (Molothrus ater) are a burden to relatively small hosts and may reduce fledgling quality and adult survival. We documented food-provisioning rates of one small host, the prothonotary warbler (Protonotaria citrea), at broods that were similar in age (containing nestlings 8–9 days old), but that varied in composition (number of warbler and cowbird nestlings) and mass, and measured the effect of brood parasitism on offspring recruitment and adult returns in the host. The rate of food provisioning increased with brood mass, and males and females contributed equally to feeding nestlings. Controlling for brood mass, the provisioning rate was higher for nests with cowbirds than those without. Recruitment of warbler fledglings from unparasitized nests was 1.6 and 3.7 times higher than that of fledglings from nests containing one or two cowbirds, respectively. Returns of double-brooded adult male and female warblers decreased with an increase in the number of cowbirds raised, but the decrease was more pronounced in males. Reduced returns of warbler adults and recruitment of warbler fledglings with increased cowbird parasitism was likely a result of reduced survival. Cowbird parasitism increased the warblers’ investment in current reproductive effort, while exerting additional costs to current reproduction and residual reproductive value. Our study provides the strongest evidence to date for negative effects of cowbird parasitism on recruitment of host fledglings and survival of host adults.  相似文献   

4.
Pamela Roe 《Hydrobiologia》1993,266(1-3):29-44
I studied the distribution, feeding biology, and reproductive biology of Pantinonemertes californiensis, described as a semi-terrestrial nemertean, along the central California coast. At the sites used in this study, maximal tidal height is about 2 m, and P. californiensis typically occurred under boulders between 1.3 and 1.7 m tidal height. Worms fed primarily on the semi-terrestrial amphipod Traskorchestia traskiana. Distribution of nemerteans was similar to that of the prey, although prey extended higher on the beach than did the worms. Nemerteans were largest and most abundant at the site with highest abundance of T. traskiana and smallest and least abundant at the lowest prey abundance site. In laboratory feeding trials, nemerteans from the site with lowest prey abundance fed most readily. Non-reproductive nemerteans lived for at least a week when submerged in sea water; some prey died within a week of being submerged. Nemerteans only lived minutes when submerged in fresh water; 50% of prey lived 4.5 h. Eggs are approximately 90–100 μm in diameter and hundreds to thousands are shed per female. Larvae are planktonic and apparently planktotrophic, and are morphologically similar to other marine hoplonemertean larvae. At the sites studied life history characteristics of P. californiensis provided little evidence of adaptations to terrestrial life in these worms and were not helpful in elucidating the role of semi-terrestrial nemerteans in the evolution of terrestrial nemerteans.  相似文献   

5.
Natural enemies are important mortality factors for herbivores and thus may influence herbivore population dynamics. In response to natural enemy pressure, herbivores can alter life history decisions, such as oviposition behavior, so that offspring are protected from natural enemies. One such strategy is to deposit eggs into structures where vulnerability to natural enemies is reduced or eliminated, i.e., use enemy-free space. The plant bug, Lygus lineolaris (Palisot de Beauvois), is native to North America and has a broad host range (>350 plant species), including crops. This bug’s eggs are attacked by a native parasitoid, Anaphes iole Girault, and parasitism levels vary greatly among host plant species. Weed hosts are critical to contemporary L. lineolaris life history because they serve as an ecological bridge from one crop growing season to the next. We investigated the egg distribution pattern of L. lineolaris on 11 host plant species (nine weeds and two crops), and parasitism by A. iole, to determine whether oviposition choices by L. lineolaris females protect their eggs from parasitism and to demonstrate the mechanism of this protection. Our results indicate that the reproductive structures of Erigeron annuus, as well as those of several other host plant species, provide a refuge from parasitism for most L. lineolaris eggs. This refuge is due to the deposition of host eggs deeper in plant tissue than the length of the ovipositor of A. iole. Also, overall parasitism levels were greater on non-Asteraceae host plant species compared with host plant species belonging to Asteraceae. Oviposition site choice by female bugs appears to be a selective strategy to take advantage of enemy-free space.  相似文献   

6.
Social parasitism is widespread in the eusocial insects. Although social parasites often show a reduced worker caste, unmated workers can also parasitize colonies. Cape honeybee workers, Apis mellifera capensis, can establish themselves as social parasites in host colonies of other honeybee subspecies. However, it is unknown whether social parasitism by laying workers also occurs among Cape honeybee colonies. In order to address this question we genotyped worker offspring of six queenless A. m. capensis colonies and determined the maternity of the reproducing workers. We found that three non-nestmate workers dominated reproduction in a host colony and produced 62.5% of the progeny. Our results show that social parasitism by laying workers is a naturally occurring part of the biology of Cape honeybees. However, such social parasitism is not frequently found (6.41% of the total worker offspring) probably due to co-evolutionary processes among A. m. capensis resulting in an equilibrium between selection for reproductive dominance in workers, colony maintenance and queen adaptation. Received 28 July 2005; revised 19 September and 11 November 2005; accepted 16 November 2005.  相似文献   

7.
The recently discovered social parasite Acromyrmex insinuator ( 25 ) exploits colonies of the leafcutter ant A. echinatior. We document that A. insinuator represents a rare early stage in the evolution of social parasitism, because a worker caste is still partially present and mating phenology has remained at least partially similar to that of the host. A. insinuator is tolerant of host queens, and sexual offspring produced in parasitized colonies can be either exclusively A. insinuator or a mix of A. insinuator and A. echinatior. The remarkably high abundance of A. insinuator in nests of the investigated Panamanian host population and the fact that A. insinuator colonies readily reproduce under laboratory conditions allowed us to test evolutionary predictions on reproductive life history evolution that are not possible in most other socially parasitic ants. We show that (1) A. insinuator has a semelparous ‘big bang’ reproductive life history which exploits host colonies without leaving reserves for survival; (2) social parasite sexuals are significantly smaller than A. echinatior host sexuals, but still large compared to host workers, confirming an evolutionary scenario of gradual size reduction and loss of the worker caste after transition towards a socially parasitic life history; (3) major changes in the life history of ants can evolve relatively quickly compared to adaptations in morphology, caste differentiation and mating phenology.  相似文献   

8.
Peristenus spretus Chen & van Achterberg (Hymenoptera: Braconidae) is a solitary endoparasitoid, which is considered for augmentative biological control of Apolygus lucorum Meyer-Dür (Heteroptera: Miridae) in Chinese cotton fields. Since the association of P. spretus with A. lucorum was only recently discovered, the biology of the parasitoid remains unknown. In order to understand its reproductive biology, the mutual interference and functional response of P. spretus were investigated by altering either the parasitoid or the host density while keeping the other constant. In both experiments, the effects of parasitoid and host densities on parasitism, superparasitism, progeny production and sex ratio were assessed. P. spretus exhibited a Holling type II functional response to changing host densities, indicating that parasitism increases with increasing host density until the parasitoid reaches its maximum reproductive capacity. The model suggested that a single P. spretus female could parasitise a maximum of 88 nymphs per day or four nymphs per hour. Increasing the wasp-nymph ratio from 1:10 to 1:80 significantly increased the offspring production more than fivefold from ±5.8 to ±35.6; further increasing the host densities (above 80 nymphs) did not significantly increase offspring production. Strong mutual interference of foraging P. spretus females occurred only at high parasitoid densities. Parasitoids foraging alone produced an average progeny of 33.4, whereas parasitoids foraging in groups of 16 produced only 2.6. The optimal wasp-nymph ratio for mass-rearing P. spretus is 4:100, given that resources of parasitoids and nymphs are unlimited.  相似文献   

9.
Conspecific brood parasitism (CBP) is a reproductive tactic whereby a parasitic female lays its eggs into the nests of other conspecific females. Genetic‐based data on the occurrence of CBP in birds, however, is still relatively scarce. We analysed prevalence of CBP in a ground‐nesting diving duck, the common pochard Aythya ferina, using a set of 17 microsatellites. Compared to related species, our population showed a relatively high level of CBP, with 39% of genotyped pochard eggs laid parasitically and 89% of nests containing ≥ 1 parasitic egg. In addition, we observed relatively high rates of interspecific brood parasitism (13% of eggs), caused predominantly by mallard Anas plathyrhynchos and tufted duck Aythya fuligula. CBP eggs had decreased hatching success compared to host eggs, with 65% of CBP and 95% of non‐CBP genotyped eggs hatching successfully. Our data suggest that this was probably due to improper timing of parasitic egglaying, which compromised synchronised hatching of CBP and host‐eggs. Despite high rates of CBP in our pochard popu lation, fitness costs associated with this reproductive tactic appear to be low for host females since neither clutch size nor host‐egg hatching probability were reduced due to CBP.  相似文献   

10.
Synopeas myles (Walker) (Hymenoptera: Platygastridae) is a parasitoid of the swede midge, Contarinia nasturtii (Kieffer) (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae), in Europe. We conducted the first thorough investigation of this parasitoid’s biology. Contrary to the biology reported for all platygastrids to date, exposure of late-instar host larvae to parasitism as opposed to eggs or early larvae yielded more S. myles offspring. Superparasitism was relatively common in the field and among groups of females in the laboratory, but was much less common among single females, providing preliminary evidence for self-discrimination. Observation of immature stages of S. myles inside living hosts revealed that supernumerary larvae in superparasitized hosts were probably eliminated by physical combat soon after hatching. With increasing levels of superparasitism, sex ratios of offspring became more female-biased and their mean development time increased. The probability that offspring would emerge from a host and the size of offspring were unaffected by increasing levels of superparasitism.  相似文献   

11.
The reproductive compensation hypothesis suggests that recently parasitized animals could offset future reproductive losses by increasing their current reproductive effort. We test this hypothesis by determining how male Texas field crickets (Gryllus texensis) alter their mate attraction displays following parasitism by acoustically orienting female parasitoid flies Ormia ochracea (Diptera, Tachinidae, Ormiini). Larval tachinid parasitoids cause little damage in phase I of host infestation. However, substantial host damage occurs in phase II, which results in parasitoid emergence and host death. We predicted that recently parasitized crickets would increase their mate attraction behaviour over pre‐parasitism levels to enhance their abilities to attract a mate in phase I. Contrary to our prediction, during phase I neither total signalling time, trilling bout duration, trilling bout rate or amplitude changed from pre‐parasitism levels. During phase II male crickets had significantly reduced total signalling times, and produced calls of significantly shorter duration at significantly slower trilling bout rates. Our results suggest that male Texas field crickets do not compensate for their shortened lifespan by increasing their reproductive effort following parasitism.  相似文献   

12.
Species that suffer from brood parasitism face a considerable reduction in their fitness which selects for the evolution of host defences. To prevent parasitism, hosts can mob or attack brood parasites when they approach the host nest and block the access to the nest by sitting on the clutch. In turn, as a counter‐adaptation, brood parasites evolved secretive behaviours near their host nests. Here, we have studied great spotted cuckoo (Clamator glandarius) egg‐laying behaviour and defence by their magpie (Pica pica) hosts inside the nest using continuous video recordings. We have found several surprising results that contradict some general assumptions. The most important is that most (71%) of the parasitic events by cuckoo females are completed while the magpie females are incubating. By staying in the nest, magpies force cuckoo females to lay their egg facing the high risk of being attacked by the incubating magpie (attack occurred in all but one of the events, n = 15). During these attacks, magpies pecked the cuckoo violently, but could never effectively avoid parasitism. These novel observations expand the sequence of adaptations and counter‐adaptations in the arms race between brood parasites and their hosts during the pre‐laying and laying periods.  相似文献   

13.
Thiel  Martin  Ullrich  Niklas  Vásquez  Nelson 《Hydrobiologia》2001,456(1-3):45-57
Estimates of the predation rates of benthic nemerteans are often based on observations of single individuals, and consequently they may not be representative for all members of a population of these predators. Herein we conducted controlled and repeatable laboratory experiments on the predation rate of the hoplonemertean Amphiporus nelsoni Sánchez 1973, which is common at exposed rocky shores along the central Chilean coast. During the austral fall (April, May 2000), nemerteans were observed in relatively high numbers crawling in the intertidal zone during early morning or late-afternoon low tides. When these nemerteans were offered living amphipods held by a forceps, they immediately attacked the amphipods and fed on them. In the laboratory experiments, nemerteans preferred the amphipod Hyale maroubrae Stebbing, 1899, which is also very common in the natural habitat of A. nelsoni. The nemerteans preyed to a higher extent on small males and non-ovigerous females than would have been expected from their abundance. We suggest that these (non-reproductive) stages of H. maroubrae are very mobile and therefore have a high likelihood of encounters with nemerteans. Predation rates reached maxima when nemerteans were provided prey densities of four or more of their preferred prey species, H. maroubrae, furthermore indicating that encounter rates with prey may affect predation rates. In long-term laboratory experiments, A. nelsoni consumed more amphipods during low tide conditions than during high tide conditions. Many nemerteans in the field prefer particular environmental conditions (e.g. nocturnal low tides), which restricts the time available for successful feeding. In the long-term experiment, predation rates of A. nelsoni never exceeded 0.5 amphipods nemertean–1 d–1. Maximum feeding events were 3 or 4 amphipods nemertean–1 d–1, but this only occurred during 10 out of a possible 2634 occasions. Nemerteans that had consumed 3 or 4 amphipods during 1 day, consumed substantially less prey during the following days. Towards the end of the long-term experiment, average predation rates decreased to 0.2 amphipods nemertean–1 d–1, corresponding to predation rates reported for other nemertean species (0.1–0.3 prey items nemertean–1 d–1). We suggest that predation rates from laboratory experiments represent maximum estimates that may not be directly transferable to field populations. Additionally, low predator–prey encounter rates with preferred prey in the field may further limit the predation impact of nemertean predators in natural habitats.  相似文献   

14.
Conspecific brood parasitism (CBP) is an alternative reproductive tactic found in many animals with parental care. Parasitizing females lay eggs in the nests of other females (hosts) of the same species, which incubate and raise both their own and the foreign offspring. The causes and consequences of CBP are debated. Using albumen fingerprinting of eggs for accurately detecting parasitism, we here analyse its relation to female condition and clutch size in High Arctic common eiders Somateria mollissima borealis. Among 166 clutches in a Svalbard colony, 31 (19%) contained eggs from more than one female, and 40 of 670 eggs (6%) were parasitic. In 6 cases an active nest with egg(s) was taken over by another female. Many suitable nest sites were unoccupied, indicating that CBP and nest takeover are reproductive tactics, not only consequences of nest site shortage. Similarity in body mass between female categories suggests that condition does not determine whether a nesting female becomes parasitised. There was no evidence of low condition in parasites: egg size was similar in hosts and parasites, and parasitism was equally frequent early and late in the laying season. Meta‐analysis of this and 3 other eider studies shows that there is a cost of being parasitised in this precocial species: host females laid on average 7% fewer eggs than other females.  相似文献   

15.
Parent-offspring conflict may arise because the lifetime reproductive success of the parent is more influenced by its life span than by reproductive success during a particular reproductive event, while the fitness of an offspring depends firstly on its own survival as a juvenile and only subsequently on its own reproductive success. The naive immune system of young animals may allow offspring to be much more affected by parasites than their parents, and thus cause an initial asymmetry in a potential parent-offspring conflict. We investigated this type of conflict by assessing the health status and the immune response of parent and offspring sand martins Riparia riparia infested with manipulated loads of ticks Ixodes lividus (nests either treated with pyrethrin, water, or just visited). The prevalence and the intensity of tick infestations differed among treatments, with low tick loads in nests with the pyrethrin treatment. Ticks reduced the reproductive success of the host and increased offspring wing length. Broods with ticks had higher leukocyte concentrations and concentrations of immunoglobulins. The concentration of immunoglobulins in nestlings was negatively related to brood size and nestling tarsus length. Nestlings receiving the control treatments had a positive association between wing length and the concentration of immunoglobulins and a negative association between tarsus length and immunoglobulins. In contrast, adult sand martins did not respond to the parasite treatment in terms of immune response. Hence, the naive immune system of nestlings may be the crucial factor causing the parent-offspring conflict over costs of parasitism to be resolved to the advantage of parents that may sacrifice nestlings in heavily parasitized nests. Received: 30 March 1998 / Accepted: 5 December 1998  相似文献   

16.
In attempting to evaluate the evolutionary stability of the reproductive strategies of an avian brood parasite, it is important to know whether or not the observed levels of parasitism on host species have changed through time and whether or not new host species are being used in the region under study. In this regard, the islands of Trinidad and Tobago provide an excellent opportunity because they are ornithologically well known and the expansion of the parasitic Shiny Cowbird Molothrus bonariensis into the West Indian region is thought to have originated from Trinidad and Tobago. On the whole, host choice has remained remarkably stable over the past 50–60 years. The three hosts (House Wren Troglodytes aedon, Red-breasted Blackbird Leistes militaris and Yellow-hooded Blackbird Agelaius icterocephalus) known to be heavily parasitized historically remain heavily parasitized today. Only one instance of parasitism of a new host (Tropical Kingbird Tyrannus melancholicus) is recorded. In the case of one intensively studied host, the Yellow-hooded Blackbird, cowbird parasitism had a minimal negative effect on the host's reproductive success. Reproductive equilibrium in this study seemed to be maintained by behavioural adaptations of host and parasite to each other. The stable pattern of host choice by Shiny Cowbirds in Trinidad and Tobago may not develop elsewhere in the West Indian region. Before the cowbird's expansion in the West Indies, potential hosts had no prior experience of brood parasites. Consequently, the island bird populations are unlikely to have evolved defensive strategies and thus may be more vulnerable to reproductive failure as a result of cowbird parasitism, precluding the development of a stable system at this point in time.  相似文献   

17.
Roe  Pamela  Norenburg  Jon L. 《Hydrobiologia》2001,456(1-3):133-144
A variety of pelagic nemerteans from our collections off California and Hawaii between 1992 and 1997 have a pair of epidermal structures, usually visible on the intact specimens, located on the ventro-lateral margins near the caudal end of the body. The only previous reports of similar structures from pelagic or any other nemerteans are for two species of the genus Plotonemertes. Histological serial sections of at least one specimen from each of about 16 morpho-species demonstrate that these are specialized glandular regions of the epidermis, which we broadly term postero-lateral glands. The objects of this study are to describe these glands at the level of light microscopy and to consider their systematic implications and possible functions. Most of the glands consist of two more or less spatially segregated types of secretory cells. One type is usually at the anterior end of the gland and resembles typical mucous goblet cells. The other type usually is the more abundant, and resembles a nemertean serous cell, with secretion that probably is relatively proteinaceous. The glands of one of the Plotonemertes specimens have two additional types of secretory cells that are relatively abundant. This study reports on postero-lateral glands from 30 specimens: three specimens of Plotonemertes in the family Protopelagonemertidae, 18 in at least three genera of the family Pelagonemertidae, six in the monotypic family Balaenanemertidae, and three of Proarmaueria in the family Armaueriidae. The glands are relatively large, with large quantities of secretory vesicles, indicating that they must be of considerable importance to the animals. However, neither structure nor location offer self-evident clues to function of these glands. We also report on different forms of regional specialization in the epidermis of Crassonemertes and Nectonemertes, both of which lack postero-lateral glands.  相似文献   

18.
Capsule Parasitism has no apparent detrimental effect.

Aims To determine whether parasitism by a haematophagous nest ectoparasite, the Louse Fly Crataerina pallida has a detrimental effect on the reproductive success of its Common Swift Apus apus hosts.

Methods An association between C. pallida abundance and various host life‐history parameters indicative of host reproductive success were sought.

Results No relationship was found between measures of parasite load and clutch size, brood size, length of time required to reach nestling asymptotic weight, the length of time from hatching to fledging, fledging success per nest, fledgling weight, and fledgling size.

Conclusion Parasitism has no apparent detrimental effect upon its hosts. Louse Flies may have evolved low levels of virulence or the negative effects expected as a consequence of its parasitism may be expressed on life‐history traits other than those studied here.  相似文献   

19.
A new species of Carcinonemertes, C. pinnotheridophila, is described and illustrated. The worms were found in the pinnotherid crab Pinnixa chaetopterana collected from the coasts of New Jersey, North Carolina and Florida. The anatomy of the new species is compared and contrasted with that of other members of the genus Carcinonemertes and an emended generic diagnosis is provided. The nemerteans only inhabit female hosts, crabs being infested with one or two mature female worms but with no more than one ensheathed in each branchial chamber; one or more smaller male nemerteans may be associated with each female. Sheaths are attached to the medial portion of the host branchial exoskeleton, and project through an opening in the floor of the chamber to exit via another aperture in the sternum; the anterior part of the sheath opens in the excurrent canal of the branchial chamber. Female worms cement their oval egg sacs on the pleopods to which the crab's eggs are also attached. Attachment, development and hatching of both host and symbiont eggs are synchronous. The incidence of infestation, reproductive potential of the nemertean, damage to its host and tolerance of the crab's growth cycles are described.  相似文献   

20.
Avian brood parasites, including cuckoos and cowbirds, have multiple negative effects on their hosts. We analysed the effects of Shiny Cowbird Molothrus bonariensis parasitism on different components (e.g. egg losses, hatching success, chick survival and nest abandonment) of House Wren Troglodytes aedon reproductive success. We also conducted an experiment to discriminate between two mechanisms that may reduce hatching success in parasitized clutches: lower efficiency of incubation due to the increase in clutch volume and disruption of host incubation by the early hatching of Cowbirds. Egg puncturing by Shiny Cowbirds reduced host clutch size at hatching by 10–20%, and parasitized nests had a decrease in hatching success of 40–80%. Egg losses and hatching failures were positively associated with the intensity of parasitism. Brood reduction was greater in parasitized nests, but the growth rate of the chicks that fledged was similar to that in unparasitized nests. The combined effects of egg losses, hatching failures and brood reduction decreased the number of fledged chicks by 80%. In addition, egg puncturing increased the likelihood of nest abandonment by Wrens. Experimental data showed that hatching failures occurred when there was a combination of: (1) an increase in the volume of the clutch by the addition of the Cowbird egg without removal of host eggs, and (2) the addition of the Cowbird egg before the onset of incubation. This was relatively common in House Wren nests, as Cowbirds generally parasitize before the onset of incubation. Our results indicate that Shiny Cowbird parasitism imposes a major impact on House Wrens, as it affects all components of the Wren's reproductive success.  相似文献   

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