Comparison of Eggshell Porosity and Estimated Gas Flux between the Brown-Headed Cowbird and Two Common Hosts
Publication Date
January 2012
Abstract
The brown-headed cowbird Molothrus ater is a brood-parasite that lays eggs in nests of a wide range of host species, including the closely-related red-winged blackbird Agelaius phoeniceus and the dickcissel Spiza americana. Although cowbird eggs have accelerated development and hatch sooner than similar-sized host eggs, this development takes place within a thickened eggshell that could impede gas flux to the developing embryo. We tested the hypothesis that the accelerated development of the cowbird embryo relative to hosts is enabled by an increase in eggshell porosity that allows increased fluxes of respiratory gases to and from the developing embryo. We found cowbird eggshell thickness was significantly greater than the eggshells of these two common hosts. Although the number of pores per egg was similar among all three species, the total pore area per egg in cowbirds was significantly greater than that of either host, despite having a smaller eggshell surface area than the red-winged blackbird. Cowbird egg pore area was 1.9 X larger than that of the redwinged blackbird. Cowbird eggshells had a significantly greater gas flux than those of the red-winged blackbird and the dickcissel. When conductance was normalized to published values of egg mass, cowbird eggs had a higher mass-specific conductance than red-winged blackbird or dickcissel eggs. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that the rapid development of brown-headed cowbird embryos is facilitated by increased eggshell porosity, and that changes in eggshell porosity represent an adaptation that enables cowbird eggs to hatch earlier than equivalently-sized host eggs.
Disciplines
Animal Sciences | Biology | Poultry or Avian Science
Recommended Citation
Jaeckle, William; Kiefer, M.; Childs, B.; Harper, R.; Rivers, J.; and Peer, B., "Comparison of Eggshell Porosity and Estimated Gas Flux between the Brown-Headed Cowbird and Two Common Hosts" (2012). Scholarship. 124.
https://digitalcommons.iwu.edu/bio_scholarship/124
Comments
The Journal of Avian Biology, Nordic Society Oikos, http://www.avianbiology.org/.