Hosts of avian brood parasites have evolved egg signatures with elevated information content.

dc.contributor.author

Caves, Eleanor M

dc.contributor.author

Stevens, Martin

dc.contributor.author

Iversen, Edwin S

dc.contributor.author

Spottiswoode, Claire N

dc.coverage.spatial

England

dc.date.accessioned

2016-07-27T13:34:01Z

dc.date.issued

2015-07-07

dc.description.abstract

Hosts of brood-parasitic birds must distinguish their own eggs from parasitic mimics, or pay the cost of mistakenly raising a foreign chick. Egg discrimination is easier when different host females of the same species each lay visually distinctive eggs (egg 'signatures'), which helps to foil mimicry by parasites. Here, we ask whether brood parasitism is associated with lower levels of correlation between different egg traits in hosts, making individual host signatures more distinctive and informative. We used entropy as an index of the potential information content encoded by nine aspects of colour, pattern and luminance of eggs of different species in two African bird families (Cisticolidae parasitized by cuckoo finches Anomalospiza imberbis, and Ploceidae by diederik cuckoos Chrysococcyx caprius). Parasitized species showed consistently higher entropy in egg traits than did related, unparasitized species. Decomposing entropy into two variation components revealed that this was mainly driven by parasitized species having lower levels of correlation between different egg traits, rather than higher overall levels of variation in each individual egg trait. This suggests that irrespective of the constraints that might operate on individual egg traits, hosts can further improve their defensive 'signatures' by arranging suites of egg traits into unpredictable combinations.

dc.identifier

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26085586

dc.identifier

rspb.2015.0598

dc.identifier.eissn

1471-2954

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/12478

dc.language

eng

dc.publisher

The Royal Society

dc.relation.ispartof

Proc Biol Sci

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10.1098/rspb.2015.0598

dc.subject

avian vision

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brood parasitism

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coevolution

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entropy

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information theory

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signals

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Animals

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Biological Evolution

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Birds

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Nesting Behavior

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Ovum

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Phenotype

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Songbirds

dc.title

Hosts of avian brood parasites have evolved egg signatures with elevated information content.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Caves, Eleanor M|0000-0003-3497-5925

pubs.author-url

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26085586

pubs.issue

1810

pubs.organisational-group

Duke

pubs.organisational-group

Duke Cancer Institute

pubs.organisational-group

Institutes and Centers

pubs.organisational-group

School of Medicine

pubs.organisational-group

Statistical Science

pubs.organisational-group

Student

pubs.organisational-group

Trinity College of Arts & Sciences

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

282

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