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Young Cowbirds Look To Adult Females For Proper Social Development
Raised by foster parents, how do juvenile cowbirds discover their true identity and learn proper social development so they grow up to be normally functioning adult cowbirds?
Β© by GrrlScientist for Forbes | LinkTr.ee
Most birders donβt much like cowbirds because the adults lay their eggs in other songbirdsβ nests and abandon them to be raised by their foster parents, often at the expense of the foster parentsβ own offspring. This life history trait is known as obligate brood parasitism.
βCowbirds often get a bad rap because theyβre brood parasites,β the studyβs lead author, behavioral ecologist Mac Chamberlain, a PhD Candidate at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, told me in email.
βBut itβs exactly this unusual start in life that has pushed them to evolve some remarkably creative strategies to navigate the world,β Mr Chamberlain explained in email. βLess than 1% of all bird species in the world are brood parasites, with cowbirds being the only obligate brood parasite bird group in North America. Rather than seeing them as villains, we should start recognizing cowbirds as a powerful example of how nature comes up with clever and unexpected ways to solve tough problems.β
