2021
DOI: 10.1093/beheco/araa122
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Host-dependent dispersal demonstrates both-sex host specificity in cuckoos

Abstract: In a parasite species, the dispersal of individuals should be dependent on the host species to which they are specialized; thus, any sexual/individual difference in host specificity may influence their dispersal patterns and, hence, population genetic structures. However, such predictions remain poorly verified in generalist avian brood parasites that are composed of multiple lineages of host-specific races. Here, we show the dispersal consequences inferred from spatial genetic structures and their association… Show more

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“…What cues might facilitate assortative mating? Male and female cuckoos imprint on their host species and favor the breeding grounds of their host ( 41 ). Thus, minutillus individuals will favor the riverine habitat of large-billed gerygones, whereas russatus individuals will favor the rainforest-edge habitat of fairy gerygones.…”
Section: Microevolutionary Evidence: Focusing In On Bronze-cuckoosunclassified
“…What cues might facilitate assortative mating? Male and female cuckoos imprint on their host species and favor the breeding grounds of their host ( 41 ). Thus, minutillus individuals will favor the riverine habitat of large-billed gerygones, whereas russatus individuals will favor the rainforest-edge habitat of fairy gerygones.…”
Section: Microevolutionary Evidence: Focusing In On Bronze-cuckoosunclassified