azure-winged magpie desert nests withn cuckoo eggs in Japan.
see:
Ostrich: Journal of African Ornithology
Volume 70, Issue 1, 1999
DOI:10.1080/00306525.1999.9639751
Nicholas B. Daviesa
pages 71-79
Davies, N.B. 1999. Cuckoos and cowbirds versus hosts: Co-evolutionary lag and equilibrium. In: Adams, N.J. & Slotow, R.H. (eds) Proc. 22 Int. Ornithol. Congr., Durban. Ostrich 70 (1): 71–79.
Experiments show co-evolution between the Common Cuckoo Cuculus canorus and its hosts. Both egg mimicry and laying behaviour of cuckoos have evolved in relation to host defences. In turn, host egg rejection and aggression to cuckoos have evolved in response to parasitism. Selective egg replacement by cuckoos may also lead to egg mimicry but current evidence for this is weak. Hosts incur costs of rejection, so below a critical parasitism frequency they do better to accept. This is reflected in phenotypic flexibility in host defences in relation to small-scale geographical variation and temporal changes in parasitism rate. The puzzle is why so many hosts accept non-mimetic eggs. There are more acceptors among cowbird hosts in North and South America than among cuckoo hosts in Europe or southern Africa, and cowbird hosts show less intermediate rejection frequencies. One hypothesis is that acceptor hosts would do better to reject and accept because they are at the start of the co-evolutionary cycle. In support of this: host-parasite systems show dynamic changes, calculations suggest that many hosts would indeed do better to reject, and old cowbird hosts are stronger rejection than are new hosts. An alternative hypothesis is that host acceptance can be an equilibrium. In support of this: rejection costs for some hosts are sufficiently high for acceptance to be best, in Australia a long breeding season reduces parasitism costs and may explain acceptance there, and Mafia cuckoos may enforce acceptance. Variation in host acceptance is likely to reflect a mixture of systems at equilibrium and those showing evolutionary lag. Host responses to parasite chicks are discussed, particularly how the parasite chicks manipulate hosts through begging signals.
Thanks for the valuable info. It's exactly what I'm looking for, though I'm curious if there are similar cases with the European Cuckoo as well.
Dear Tamara,
Yes, I meant interspecific brood parasites, but nontheless, I am interested in conspecific parasitism and brood abandonment also, if you have any info.
Dear André,
Thank you for the abstract! I know that the abandonment of the nest while egg phase is very well documented, but I am not aware of any literature regarding the desertion of the nest after the cuckoo chick has hatched. Isn't this a peculiarity? I mean, why not desert the net when you know for sure that the chick is not yours?