Probing the limits of egg recognition using egg rejection experiments along phenotypic gradients

Brood parasites lay their eggs in other females' nests, leaving the host parents to hatch and rear their young. Studying how brood parasites manipulate hosts into raising their young and how hosts detect parasitism provide important insights in the field of coevolutionary biology. Brood parasit...

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Publicado: 2018
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Acceso en línea:https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_1940087X_v2018_n138_p_Canniff
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_1940087X_v2018_n138_p_Canniff
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spelling paper:paper_1940087X_v2018_n138_p_Canniff2023-06-08T16:32:18Z Probing the limits of egg recognition using egg rejection experiments along phenotypic gradients Avian perception Brood parasitism Cognition Color vision Eggshell color Issue 138 Rejection experiment This month in jove animal bird evolution female growth, development and aging nesting ovum Animals Biological Evolution Birds Female Nesting Behavior Ovum Brood parasites lay their eggs in other females' nests, leaving the host parents to hatch and rear their young. Studying how brood parasites manipulate hosts into raising their young and how hosts detect parasitism provide important insights in the field of coevolutionary biology. Brood parasites, such as cuckoos and cowbirds, gain an evolutionary advantage because they do not have to pay the costs of rearing their own young. However, these costs select for host defenses against all developmental stages of parasites, including eggs, their young, and adults. Egg rejection experiments are the most common method used to study host defenses. During these experiments, a researcher places an experimental egg in a host nest and monitors how hosts respond. Color is often manipulated, and the expectation is that the likelihood of egg discrimination and the degree of dissimilarity between the host and experimental egg are positively related. This paper serves as a guide for conducting egg rejection experiments from describing methods for creating consistent egg colors to analyzing the findings of such experiments. Special attention is given to a new method involving uniquely colored eggs along color gradients that has the potential to explore color biases in host recognition. Without standardization, it is not possible to compare findings between studies in a meaningful way; a standard protocol within this field will allow for increasingly accurate and comparable results for further experiments. © 2018 Journal of Visualized Experiments. 2018 https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_1940087X_v2018_n138_p_Canniff http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_1940087X_v2018_n138_p_Canniff
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Avian perception
Brood parasitism
Cognition
Color vision
Eggshell color
Issue 138
Rejection experiment
This month in jove
animal
bird
evolution
female
growth, development and aging
nesting
ovum
Animals
Biological Evolution
Birds
Female
Nesting Behavior
Ovum
spellingShingle Avian perception
Brood parasitism
Cognition
Color vision
Eggshell color
Issue 138
Rejection experiment
This month in jove
animal
bird
evolution
female
growth, development and aging
nesting
ovum
Animals
Biological Evolution
Birds
Female
Nesting Behavior
Ovum
Probing the limits of egg recognition using egg rejection experiments along phenotypic gradients
topic_facet Avian perception
Brood parasitism
Cognition
Color vision
Eggshell color
Issue 138
Rejection experiment
This month in jove
animal
bird
evolution
female
growth, development and aging
nesting
ovum
Animals
Biological Evolution
Birds
Female
Nesting Behavior
Ovum
description Brood parasites lay their eggs in other females' nests, leaving the host parents to hatch and rear their young. Studying how brood parasites manipulate hosts into raising their young and how hosts detect parasitism provide important insights in the field of coevolutionary biology. Brood parasites, such as cuckoos and cowbirds, gain an evolutionary advantage because they do not have to pay the costs of rearing their own young. However, these costs select for host defenses against all developmental stages of parasites, including eggs, their young, and adults. Egg rejection experiments are the most common method used to study host defenses. During these experiments, a researcher places an experimental egg in a host nest and monitors how hosts respond. Color is often manipulated, and the expectation is that the likelihood of egg discrimination and the degree of dissimilarity between the host and experimental egg are positively related. This paper serves as a guide for conducting egg rejection experiments from describing methods for creating consistent egg colors to analyzing the findings of such experiments. Special attention is given to a new method involving uniquely colored eggs along color gradients that has the potential to explore color biases in host recognition. Without standardization, it is not possible to compare findings between studies in a meaningful way; a standard protocol within this field will allow for increasingly accurate and comparable results for further experiments. © 2018 Journal of Visualized Experiments.
title Probing the limits of egg recognition using egg rejection experiments along phenotypic gradients
title_short Probing the limits of egg recognition using egg rejection experiments along phenotypic gradients
title_full Probing the limits of egg recognition using egg rejection experiments along phenotypic gradients
title_fullStr Probing the limits of egg recognition using egg rejection experiments along phenotypic gradients
title_full_unstemmed Probing the limits of egg recognition using egg rejection experiments along phenotypic gradients
title_sort probing the limits of egg recognition using egg rejection experiments along phenotypic gradients
publishDate 2018
url https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_1940087X_v2018_n138_p_Canniff
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_1940087X_v2018_n138_p_Canniff
_version_ 1768544060202549248