Data from: A brood parasite selects for its own egg traits
Data files
Aug 21, 2013 version files 24.38 KB
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Egg_dimensions.csv
12.15 KB
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Experiment1.csv
2.19 KB
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Experiment2.csv
4.47 KB
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Honeyguide_repeatability.csv
757 B
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README_for_Egg_dimensions.txt
695 B
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README_for_Experiment1.txt
652 B
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README_for_Experiment2.txt
541 B
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README_for_Honeyguide_repeatability.txt
470 B
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README_for_Shell_thicknesses.txt
899 B
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Shell_thicknesses.csv
1.56 KB
Abstract
Many brood parasitic birds lay eggs that mimic their hosts' eggs in appearance. This typically arises from selection from discriminating hosts that reject eggs which differ from their own. However, selection on parasitic eggs may also arise from parasites themselves, since it should pay a laying parasitic female to detect and destroy another parasitic egg previously laid in the same host nest by a different female. In this study, I experimentally test the source of selection on greater honeyguide egg size and shape, which is correlated with that of its several host species, all of which breed in dark holes. Its commonest host species did not discriminate against experimental eggs that differed from their own in size and shape, but laying female honeyguides preferentially punctured experimental eggs more than host or control eggs. This should improve offspring survival given that multiple parasitism by this species is common, and that honeyguide chicks kill all other nest occupants. Hence, selection on egg size in greater honeyguides parasitising bee-eaters is imposed not by host defences, but by interference competition among parasites themselves.
- Spottiswoode, Claire N. (2013), A brood parasite selects for its own egg traits, Biology Letters, Article-journal, https://doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2013.0573
