Would you raise the bird that murdered your children? - Steve Rothstein

2,187,584 views ・ 2021-12-14

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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This is a little bee-eater’s nest.
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But this is not a little bee-eater chick.
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It’s a newly hatched honeyguide— and it’s much more lethal.
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When its mother placed it here, she punctured all the other eggs in the nest.
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However, one little bee-eater chick survived the attack and is now hatching.
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Although the honeyguide nestling is still completely blind,
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it instinctively stabs the little bee-eater chick
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with its sharp, hooked beak.
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And over the following weeks,
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the host parents devotedly care for the hatchling
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that murdered their offspring.
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This is but one example of brood parasitism,
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an evolutionary strategy in which one animal tricks another
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into rearing its young.
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It’s especially well-known among birds.
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By depositing their eggs into a stranger’s nest,
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brood parasites are able to shift the major costs of parenting onto others.
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Brood parasite chicks usually hatch early,
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then monopolize their host parents’ attention.
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Some stab their fellow nestlings to death,
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while others shove the remaining occupants out of the nest.
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Meanwhile, others are less harmful to their hosts.
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Not all brood parasites kill all of their host’s offspring outright.
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Brown-headed Cowbirds usually outcompete them
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by begging for food louder, more frequently, and with a wider mouth.
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Among the most benign,
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black-headed ducks lay their eggs in other nests to be incubated.
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However, a few hours after hatching, they simply saunter off.
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But in the most egregious cases of brood parasitism,
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why don’t host parents take a stand?
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In fact, hosts will often drive adult brood parasites away from their nests,
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and many take their defenses further.
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But whether a hosts can recognize and reject parasitic eggs and nestlings
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seems to depend on a few factors.
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Eastern phoebes will accept
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a Brown-headed Cowbird’s speckled egg into their nest,
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though theirs are pure white.
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The gray catbird, on the other hand,
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is an expert at rooting out the very same parasites.
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It memorizes what the first egg in its nest looks like,
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which is usually its own, and tosses any aberrations.
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This retaliatory adaptation can fuel an evolutionary arms race
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where brood parasites evolve eggs that closely mimic their host’s.
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Interestingly, birds that do reject parasitic eggs
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are usually clueless when it comes to parasitic chicks.
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Reed warblers are good at ejecting poorly matching cuckoo eggs.
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But if one hatches in their nest,
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they’ll care for it even after it’s grown six times their size.
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Though chick rejection is a rarer phenomenon,
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there are some noteworthy examples.
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While incubating its eggs, the Australian superb fairy-wren sings to them,
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imparting a unique note that its chicks use as a kind of password.
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When a cuckoo is in the wren’s nest, it hatches first and pushes the others out.
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But, perhaps because it hatched sooner,
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the cuckoo chick wasn't able to learn the password,
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and so it doesn’t croon the right begging call.
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At this point, the adults usually abandon their nest and start another.
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Altogether, host species show a remarkable variety of responses.
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This seems to partially be a result of how long
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brood parasitism has been in their environment,
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and thus how much time they've had to evolve suitable adaptations.
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In fact, studies have shown that those hosts that reject parasitic eggs
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less frequently can visually distinguish between their eggs and a brood parasite’s.
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They simply lack a response to the visual information.
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This is probably because, before brood parasitism appeared,
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responding would have likely had no adaptive value.
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And even when hosts do recognise a parasite,
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getting rid of it may not be the best option.
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The host, especially if it’s small, might not be able to kill the parasite—
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or could risk breaking its own eggs in the process.
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Unless the brood parasite kills all of the host’s young,
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it may be best to simply foster the imposter.
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Brood parasitism tends to evoke horror and disdain.
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But why should it be thought of as any more objectionable
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than predator-prey relationships?
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And is it ever productive to impose human morals onto other animals?
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Or does it end up saying more about us than it does them?
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Whichever way you swing it,
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brood parasitism is yet another example of the fascinating turns evolution has taken.
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