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Science/Tech
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Title: Tit-for-tat: birds found to repay wartime help
Source: World Science
URL Source: http://www.world-science.net/exclusives/080706_flycatcher.htm
Published: Jul 6, 2008
Author: Not Attributed
Post Date: 2008-07-07 15:37:20 by Tauzero
Keywords: None
Views: 26

Tit-for-tat: birds found to repay wartime help

July 6, 2008 Special to World Science

When it spots a lurk­ing pred­a­tor, the sparrow-like pied fly­catch­er re­acts in a way com­mon among some birds and mam­mals. It calls up a mob of its peers to drive the in­ter­lop­er away.

But more than a feisty de­fend­er, the northern Eur­o­pe­an bird is al­so a shrewd ac­count keep­er, re­search­ers say: it re­mem­bers which of its neigh­bors an­swered its call to arms, and which stayed home. And it re­pays each in kind.

Sci­en­tists say the be­hav­ior of­fers new in­sights in­to the ev­o­lu­tion of coop­era­t­ion and al­tru­ism, and a new ap­precia­t­ion of the com­plex­ity of bird so­cial life.

Ap­par­ently even some birds have learn­ed that “play­ing nice pays,” Uni­ver­s­ity of Chi­ca­go ev­o­lu­tion­ary bi­olo­g­ist Da­vid Wheatcroft wrote re­cent­ly, al­lud­ing to the fly­catch­er re­search, in which he was not in­volved.

The find­ings imply “a lev­el of so­phis­tica­t­ion in bird com­mun­i­ties great­er than had pre­vi­ously been real­ized,” he went on, writ­ing in the June 26 ad­vance on­line is­sue of the the re­search jour­nal Trends in Ecol­o­gy & Ev­o­lu­tion. Si­m­i­lar be­hav­ior to the fly­catch­ers’ has been found in red-winged black­birds.

A group at the Uni­ver­s­ity of Dau­gav­pils, Lat­via and the Uni­ver­s­ity of Tar­tu, Es­to­nia placed 300 fly­catch­er cou­ples in nest boxes in groups of three in a pine for­est.

The re­search­ers then watched what hap­pened when they placed a stuffed owl visibly next to the nests. In cer­tain runs of the ex­pe­ri­ment, the in­ves­ti­ga­tors al­so se­cretly ab­ducted one cou­ple from each group at ran­dom, so that these could­n’t join in any “mob­bing.”

The re­sults: oth­er birds would in­i­ti­ate mob­bing, by sound­ing spe­cial calls. An hour lat­er, once re­turned to their nest, eve­ry ab­sented bird cou­ple saw its at­tempts to in­i­ti­ate a charge spurned by the pre­vi­ous in­i­ti­a­tor, though oth­er group mem­bers usu­ally still helped. Those who had joined the first time—and all did when avail­able—al­most al­ways saw their as­sis­tance re­paid.

“Co-operating fly­catch­er fam­i­lies won the re­ward,” but “non co-operators were im­me­di­ately pun­ished,” wrote the re­search­ers, In­drikis Krams of the Uni­ver­s­ity of Dau­gav­pils and col­leagues in the Feb­ru­ary is­sue of the jour­nal Be­hav­ior­al Ecol­o­gy and So­cio­bi­o­logy.

Rob­ert Olen­dorf of Mich­i­gan State Uni­ver­s­ity and col­leagues reached si­m­i­lar con­clu­sions in a study with male red-winged black­birds pub­lished in the Jan. 22, 2004 is­sue of Pro­ceed­ings of the Roy­al So­ci­e­ty: Bi­o­log­i­cal Sci­ences. Olen­dorf’s group used recorded bird calls in place of real ones.

The find­ings may help shed light on how coop­era­t­ion evolved, even among un­re­lat­ed in­di­vid­u­als, Krams and col­leagues wrote. That has been a per­en­ni­ally thorny ques­tion.

Ev­o­lu­tion oc­curs when stronger or fit­ter in­di­vid­u­als in a popula­t­ion re­pro­duce more than oth­ers do, so their genes spread more widely at the ex­pense of less “fit” genes. Many rep­e­ti­tion of this can change spe­cies in­to en­tire­ly new ones. But kind­ness and help­ing seem to pro­vide no fit­ness ad­van­tage, and may even hurt, so it seems any genes for these should have died out long ago. Yet these qual­i­ties ex­ist, and even some pos­si­ble genes for them re­portedly iden­ti­fied.

A range of ex­plana­t­ions has been pro­posed. One the­o­ry is that coop­era­t­ion arises from re­ciprocity: an­i­mals de­vel­op the ten­den­cy to help be­cause they will re­ceive help in re­turn. This poses its own dif­fi­cul­ties—who re­pays the first helper’s trou­ble? Re­gard­less, if re­ciprocity is part of the equa­t­ion, it clearly has a bet­ter chance of evolv­ing among groups of an­i­mals that are fa­mil­iar with each oth­er, so each mem­ber can track who has been naugh­ty and who nice.

Pre­vi­ously, re­ciprocal al­tru­ism had been found only in a a few spe­cies be­sides hu­mans, such as vam­pire bats that ex­change food and some apes. Fly­catch­ers al­so show the abil­ity to rec­og­nize each oth­er as in­di­vid­u­als, Krams and col­leagues wrote—so some birds bat­tles can be added to the list of an­i­mal be­hav­iors ex­plained by re­ciprocal al­tru­ism.

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