Data from: Reed warbler hosts fine-tune their defenses to track three decades of cuckoo decline

  • Thorogood, Rose
  • Davies, Nick B.
Publisher
Data Archiving and Networked Services (DANS)

Abstract

Interactions between avian hosts and brood parasites can provide a model for how animals adapt to a changing world. Reed warbler (Acrocephalus scirpaceus) hosts employ costly defenses to combat parasitism by common cuckoos (Cuculus canorus). During the last three decades cuckoos have declined markedly across England, reducing parasitism at our study site (Wicken Fen) from 24% of reed warbler nests in 1985 to 1% in 2012. Here we show with experiments that host mobbing and egg rejection defenses have tracked this decline in local parasitism risk: the proportion of reed warbler pairs mobbing adult cuckoos (assessed by responses to cuckoo mounts and models) has declined from 90% to 38%, and the proportion rejecting non-mimetic cuckoo eggs (asse...

Extracted data

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