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Causes of couspecific nest parasitism in the northern masked weaver
Authors:Wendy M. Jackson
Affiliation:(1) Department of Zoology NJ-15, University of Washington, 98195 Seattle, WA, USA;(2) Present address: Burke Museum DB-10, University of Washington, 98195 Seattle, WA, USA
Abstract:Summary Conspecific nest parasitism is a common reproductive strategy in the northern masked weaver (Ploceus taeniopterus). Parasites appear to be females with nests of their own who lay an additional egg in another female's nest as a way to enhance their reproductive success. Brood size in the northern masked weaver is practically constrained to three: starvation in four-chick broods is very common. The constraint on brood size is probably imposed by the extreme hatching asynchrony characteristic of this species: the last egg in a four-egg clutch hatches 72 h after the first egg, and when a chick starves, it is almost always the youngest chick. Late-hatching chicks also grow more slowly than do early-hatching chicks. If a female were to lay a fourth egg in her own nest, there is little chance that it would succeed. However; if she places it in another female's nest before that host lays her third egg, then it may have a greater chance of success.
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