NVR Logo
Cowbirds make warblers an offer they can’t refuse
Tuesday, March 06, 2007
Save and Share Share
WASHINGTON — Raise my kids, or else!

People have long wondered how cowbirds can get away with leaving their eggs in the nests of other species, who then raise the baby cowbirds. Why don’t the hosts just toss the strange eggs out?
Now researchers seem to have an answer — if the host birds reject the strange eggs, the cowbirds come back and trash the place.

The so-called “Mafia behavior,” by brown-headed cowbirds is reported in this week’s online edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
“It’s the female cowbirds who are running the mafia racket at our study site,” Jeffrey P. Hoover, of the Florida Museum of Natural History and the Illinois Natural History Survey, said in a statement.

“Our study shows many of them returned and ransacked the nest when we removed the parasitic egg,” he explained.
Hoover and Scott K. Robinson of the Florida museum studied cowbirds over four seasons in the Cache River watershed in southern Illinois.

While cowbirds leave their eggs in many other birds nests, the researchers focused on warblers in the study because warblers usually accept and raise cowbird eggs.

To see what would happen, Hoover and Robinson watched where the cowbirds left eggs in warbler nests, and then removed some of them.

They found that 56 percent of the nests where cowbird eggs were removed were later ransacked.

They also found evidence of what they called ‘farming’ behavior,’ in which cowbirds destroyed a nest to force the host bird to build another. The cowbird then synchronized its egg laying with the hosts’ ‘renest’ attempt.

“Cowbirds parasitized 85 percent of the renests, which is strong supporting evidence for both farming and mafia behavior,” Hoover said.

The research was supported by the Illinois Department of Natural Resources and the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service.
1 comment(s)

Seen it before... wrote on Mar 6, 2007 9:40 PM:

" My ex did the same thing! "

Comment Guidelines
The goal of the story comments section at NapaValleyRegister.com is to have an open, thought-provoking, civil community forum for all issues.
What gets your comment posted?
• Staying on topic
• Keeping your comment to 300 words or less
• Avoiding name-calling
• Addressing your comments to the message rather than the messenger
What gets your comment deleted?
• Personal attacks
• Derogatory remarks
• Name-calling of any sort
• Going off-topic
• Hate speech
• Racially-insensitive comments
• Implying guilt of a subject in a crime story before there is a court verdict
• Posting e-mail addresses
• Posting comments of a commercial nature
• POSTING WITH ALL CAPITAL LETTERS
• Linking multiple comments together with "to be continued..." to get around the 300 word limit.
The fine print
- Comments are either approved or denied. We do not edit comments.
- You are welcome to modify and resubmit a denied comment.
- Comments may take several hours to be posted.
- Comments posted are those of the writer, and do not necessarily reflect the opinion of NapaValleyRegister.com, its employees or its parent company.
- Do you have information on a story? Please go to our virtual newsroom to send us a news tip.
- If you feel a posted comment has violated our guidelines, please contact online@napanews.com or add a comment indicating you have an issue and our moderators will review the comment in question.
Search:
Web Search Powered
By Yahoo! Search
Napa Valley Register on Facebook
Copyright © 2009 Napa Valley Publishing, a member of Lee Enterprises, Inc.
Terms of Use | Privacy Policy