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Cuckoo arms race
Email: Richard Robinson - rrobinson@nasw.org News from The Scientist 2003, 4(1):20030313-04 doi:10.1186/20030313-04
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The cuckoo lays its eggs in the nest of an unwitting host species and after hatched, the parasite nestling often evicts the host eggs or young, ensuring maximum resources for itself. While some hosts recognize and destroy the cuckoo egg, defensive action against hatchlings has been underinvestigated. In the 13 March Nature, Naomi Langmore and colleagues at the Australian National University, Canberra, show that, in response to parasitism, the Australian superb fairy-wren stops feeding the bronze-cuckoo chick and abandons the nest, a strategy that can be outwitted by the right cuckoo call (Nature, 422:157-160, March 13, 2003).
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