Host traits and lifetime fitness costs of being parasitized in red-breasted mergansers

Author:

Craik Shawn R.1,Titman Rodger D.2,Calvert Anna M.3,Robertson Gregory J.4,Mallory Mark L.5,Gutowsky Sarah E.5

Affiliation:

1. Département des sciences, Université Sainte-Anne, Pointe-de-l’Église, NS B0W 2L0, Canada

2. Department of Natural Resource Sciences, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada

3. Landscape Science and Technology Division, Environment and Climate Change Canada, Ottawa, ON, Canada

4. Wildlife Research Division, Environment and Climate Change Canada, Mount Pearl, NL, Canada

5. Department of Biology, Acadia University, Wolfville, NS, Canada

Abstract

The addition of eggs to a nest by a conspecific is known for approximately 250 bird species. Understanding the evolution of conspecific brood parasitism (CBP) requires assessment of fitness consequences to the egg recipient (host). We addressed host traits and the effects of CBP on future reproduction (i.e., annual survival) and hatching success of hosts by following the nesting of 206 red-breasted mergansers ( Mergus serrator) for a colony in which an average of 41% of nests was parasitized annually. Each host was tracked for ≥2 seasons and up to seven seasons. The proportion of a host’s nesting attempts that was parasitized averaged 43% and varied considerably across individuals (range 0%–100%). Probability of parasitism, however, was not repeatable across a host’s nests. Rather, rates of CBP throughout a host’s lifetime increased with earlier dates of nest initiation. CBP had no effect on annual survival of a host. Hatching success throughout a host’s lifetime declined with a greater number of foreign eggs added to the individual’s nests. This study revealed that there may be measurable costs of CBP to lifetime reproductive success in red-breasted mergansers, although our observations suggest that costs to hosts are limited to the most heavily parasitized clutches.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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