Number of the records: 1  

Are tits really unsuitable hosts for the Common Cuckoo?

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    SYSNO ASEP0427436
    Document TypeJ - Journal Article
    R&D Document TypeJournal Article
    Subsidiary JČlánek ve WOS
    TitleAre tits really unsuitable hosts for the Common Cuckoo?
    Author(s) Grim, T. (CZ)
    Samaš, P. (CZ)
    Procházka, Petr (UBO-W) RID, ORCID, SAI
    Rutila, J. (FI)
    Number of authors4
    Source TitleOrnis Fennica. - : BirdLife Suomi Ry - ISSN 0030-5685
    Roč. 91, č. 3 (2014), s. 166-177
    Number of pages12 s.
    Languageeng - English
    CountryFI - Finland
    KeywordsCuculus canorus chicks ; hole nesting birds ; reed warbler hosts ; parasitic birds ; brood parasite ; parental care ; egg eviction ; great ; virulence ; discrimination
    Subject RIVEG - Zoology
    R&D ProjectsGAP506/12/2404 GA ČR - Czech Science Foundation (CSF)
    Institutional supportUBO-W - RVO:68081766
    UT WOS000344436900004
    EID SCOPUS84907525362
    AnnotationAvian brood parasites exploit hosts that have accessible nests and a soft insect diet. Common Cuckoo (Cucuclus canorus) hosts were traditionally classified as suitable if both parameters were fulfilled or unsuitable if one, or both, were not. In line with this view, holenesting tits (Paridae) have become a text-book example of unsuitable Cuckoo hosts. Our extensive literature search for Cuckoo eggs hatched and chicks raised by hosts revealed 16 Cuckoo nestlings in Great Tit (Parus major) nests, 2 nestlings and 2 fledglings in Blue Tits (Cyanistes caerulens), and 1 nestling in a Crested Tit (Lophophanes cristatus) nest. Our own data from natural observations and cross-fostering experiments concur with literature data that Great Tits are able to rear Cuckoo chicks to fledging. The natural observations involve the first known cases where a bird species became parasitized as a byproduct of nest usurpation (take-over). Surprisingly, Cuckoo chicks raised by Great Tits grew better than Cuckoo chicks raised by common hosts, even alongside host own chicks. The frequency of Cuckoo parasitism in tits may be underestimated by studying tits in artificial nest-boxes with small entrances that prevent Cuckoos from laying and/or fledging. Results support a view that host suitability is not a categorical parameter (host suitable or unsuitable) but a continuous phenomenon. Understanding the diversity of parameters that determine host selection by Cuckoos is limited, because studies on Cuckoo chick diet, growth, and survival in most hosts are rare. Therefore any data are valuable and provide indispensable material for future meta-analyses.
    WorkplaceInstitute of Vertebrate Biology
    ContactHana Slabáková, slabakova@ivb.cz, Tel.: 543 422 524
    Year of Publishing2015
    Electronic addresshttp://www.ornisfennica.org/pdf/early/4Grim.pdf
Number of the records: 1  

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