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Egg recognition and brain size in a cuckoo host.

Jianping Liu1, Canchao Yang1, Jiangping Yu2

  • 1Ministry of Education Key Laboratory for Ecology of Tropical Islands, College of Life Sciences, Hainan Normal University, Haikou, 571158, China.

Behavioural Processes
|August 26, 2020
PubMed
Summary

This study found that cinereous tits (Parus cinereus) do not show larger brain sizes despite facing cuckoo brood parasitism. Cognitive ability did not correlate with foreign egg recognition in this host bird species.

Keywords:
Brain sizeBrood parasiteEgg recognitionGreat titParus cinereus

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Area of Science:

  • Evolutionary ecology
  • Animal behavior
  • Neuroscience

Background:

  • Interspecific brood parasitism by cuckoos presents significant evolutionary challenges for host species.
  • Effective egg recognition and rejection by hosts are crucial for countering brood parasitism.
  • Cognitive demands of recognizing foreign eggs may drive brain size evolution in host birds.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the relationship between cuckoo brood parasitism and brain size evolution in cinereous tits (Parus cinereus).
  • To determine if egg recognition ability, a cognitive trait, is associated with larger brain size in host birds.

Main Methods:

  • Experimental presentation of mimetic and non-mimetic artificial cuckoo eggs to female cinereous tits.
  • Assessment of egg recognition and rejection behaviors in female cinereous tits.
  • Comparison of brain size between individuals that rejected foreign eggs and those that accepted them.

Main Results:

  • No significant difference in brain size was found between female cinereous tits that recognized and rejected foreign eggs versus those that accepted them.
  • The results did not support the hypothesis that cuckoo parasitism selects for increased brain size in this host species.

Conclusions:

  • Cognitive abilities related to foreign egg recognition in female cinereous tits do not appear to be linked to larger brain size.
  • Despite the potential benefits of enhanced cognitive function in reducing brood parasitism costs, brain size did not evolve in response to this selective pressure in this species.