The impact of learning foster species' song on the evolution of specialist avian brood parasitism
Authored by JB Beltman, P Haccou, Cate C ten
Date Published: 2003
DOI: 10.1093/beheco/arg082
Sponsors:
Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Obligate interspecific avian brood parasites do not build nests of their
own but lay their eggs in the nests of other species. It has been
proposed that a flexible song learning mechanism (copying the
heterospecific songs of the foster species) facilitates the evolution of
brood-parasitic behavior. Some sort of song copying is common to all
songbirds; hence, to better understand the evolution of brood parasitism
it is important to study the role of song learning. The proposed
hypothesis does not take into account that flexible song learning might
make mate acquisition more difficult because males that are preferred by
brood-parasitic females would be initially rare. We examine this by
means of two population dynamic models. By using a recurrence equation
model of brood parasites competing with their nestbuilding ancestors, we
show that flexible song learning is indeed an obstacle to the evolution
of brood parasitism. Results from a more realistic, individual-based
model, in which the brood-parasitic trait can evolve more gradually, confirm this finding. However, we also show that the obstacle of
flexible song learning can be overcome quite easily when males also are
carriers of the brood-parasitic trait. This is probably because brood
parasitism is a neutral trait in males, which increases the number of
mutants carrying genes for brood parasitism, and thus makes the female
task of finding suitable partners easier.
Tags
sexual selection
birds
sympatric speciation
Mate Choice
Origin
Recognition
Preference
Indigobirds vidua
Nest parasitism
Mimicry