Periodic Reporting for period 2 - WEAVERBIRD_DEFENCE (Unravelling an extended phenotype: sexual selection and the evolution of nest architecture in weaverbird defence against brood parasitism)
Période du rapport: 2021-07-08 au 2022-07-07
One dominant force in nature is coevolution, which often leads to escalating arms races of adaptations and counteradaptations. Cuckoos and their hosts provide a textbook example of coevolution, by reciprocally selecting for better parasitic tricks (to fool hosts into rearing cuckoo offspring) or better host defences (to avoid rearing a cuckoo chick). However, we know much less about how these arms races between species interact with the social selection pressures within species.
The weavers (Ploceidae) provide a unique opportunity to investigate such questions. These small birds produce conspicuous, enclosed nests that vary both across and within species. The males produce the nests and the females choose their preferred nests in which to lay eggs. Weavers are also host species of the brood parasitic Diederik cuckoo (Chrysococcyx caprius) and the architectural design of weaver nests is thought to be an important barrier in keeping the cuckoo out of the nest, but we have a surprisingly limited understanding of this fascinating evolutionary interaction.
This project had two main objectives:
(1) Uncover evolutionary mechanisms that explain weaver nest structure: (a) is weaver nest architecture a defence against brood parasitism and if so, how do nests repel cuckoos? (b) to characterise the extent to which female preference for nest characteristics interacts with nest defences against cuckoos; (c) to document and examine the effects of variation in nest defences on host egg patterning (information used by hosts when making decisions about egg rejection), since nest structure influences the light environment in which host and cuckoo eggs are observed by the host.
(2) To draw inspiration from natural structures using interdisciplinary approaches that could provide bio-inspired solutions to problems faced by humans.
Unfortunately, work towards each of these outputs was severely curtailed owing to enduring direct and indirect effects of the global covid pandemic.
Nevertheless some progress was achieved.The project grew from two strands of previous work by the the Researcher, and these continued to provide background detail to the project supported by the Marie Curie Fellowship. One previous strand examined how the appearance of a brood parasite contributes to provoking defences against parasitism by the host. The second strand of work investigated the breeding biology of weaverbirds. Even though it proved impossible to reach any conclusions about the two main objectives of the current project, five papers / preprints were produced in relation to these preliminary strands of work.
Before starting work on investigating the role of nest characteristics in contributing to defences against cuckoos, it was necessary for the Researcher to use the first year of work to conduct some preliminary investigations into the other factors that contribute to host defences against cuckoos. Part of this work was an invited review considering the adaptive value of cuckoo resemblance to hawks, the physiological responses it evokes in hosts and therefore the type of defences that are then mounted (York 2021, Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution).
A second part of this work involved some field experiments conducted in South Africa between October 2019 and March 2020 on diederik cuckoos their host, the southern red bishop. The sexes differ in Diederik cuckoos, with females bearing duller plumage than males and sporting a brown iris and eye-ring rather than the crimson equivalents displayed by the males. The experiments revealed that hosts were just as likely to mob a male cuckoo or a female cuckoo (or a control). Curiously, though, the incidence of egg-rejection was greater when a male cuckoo visited the nest than when a female cuckoo visited. The results suggest that, independent of any nest characteristics, the female's drabber appearance might be adaptive in eliciting weaker rejection defences by hosts than is seen in response to males (York 2024, Ecology and Evolution).
Meanwhile, background work on the breeding biology of weavers was brought fruition through the publication of three preprints/ papers. The first investigated the role of prolactin in regulating parental care and helping behaviour in white-browed sparrow weavers (Walker et al 2021 BioRxiv). The second considered how rainfall and social dominance contribute to telomere dynamics (Wood et al 2022 Molecular Ecology). The third paper examined the trade-off that exists between helping behaviour and dispersal in males and females (Capilla-Lasheras et al. 2024 PLoS Biology).
A second goal was to use the project to provide opportunities for education and training via research for undergraduate and graduate students, with direct benefits for the students in terms of skill development, and for society in terms of disseminating the scientific approach through research-led teaching. A master's student and undergraduate project students were recruited to this end, with local support from the host institution - but supervision of their projects could not be undertaken by the Researcher, for the reasons given above. The projects were taken over by alternative supervisors but had to be tilted differently to reflect the research skills of the substitute supervisors.
A third goal was to engage a wider public with the results of the research, and this was more successful. The Researcher participated in and led a number of outreach initiatives for local Bird Clubs, Ornithological Societies, and community-facing groups, including a crafting outreach event making decorative bird nests in collaboration with the Women’s Institute and Cambridge Museum of Zoology.