Jarkko Rutila

Jarkko Rutila
University of Eastern Finland | UEF ·  Department of Biosciences

Doctor of Philosophy

About

37
Publications
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837
Citations

Publications

Publications (37)
Article
Avian brood parasites lay their eggs in other birds' nests, and hosts can mitigate the fitness cost of raising unrelated offspring by rejecting parasitic eggs. A visually-based cognitive mechanism often thought to be used by hosts to discriminate the foreign egg is to compare it against the hosts' own eggshell by size, shape, maculation, and/or gro...
Article
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Virulent brood parasites refrain from arduous parental care, often kill host progeny and inflict rearing costs upon their hosts. Quantifying the magnitude of such costs across the whole period of care (from incubation through to parasite fledgling independence) is essential for understanding the selection pressures on hosts to evolve antiparasitic...
Chapter
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The great majority of brood parasitism studies focused on a single ontogenetic stage, typically egg stage, and on open-nesting hosts, especially those of the common cuckoo. Using extensive data from the cuckoo’s only known regular cavity-nesting host, the common redstart, we highlight the importance of a comprehensive approach when all ontogenetic...
Article
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Being an obligate parasite, juvenile common cuckoos Cuculus canorus are thought to reach their African wintering grounds from Palearctic breeding grounds without guidance from experienced conspecifics but this has not been documented. We used satellite tracking to study naïve migrating common cuckoos. Juvenile cuckoos left breeding sites in Finland...
Data
Number of ringed common cuckoos per country and country where southernmost recovery was obtained. Ringing periods are shown in the country column. Information obtained from European bird ringing atlases. (DOCX)
Data
Timing and duration of the autumn migration periods of satellite-tracked juvenile and adult cuckoos in 2010–2014. Dates are given for arrivals and departures and the duration of each stage is given in days. ID = Bird identification with sex (F = female, M = male) followed by satellite-tag ID and last two digits of the tagging year in brackets. Age...
Data
Morphometrics and ages of the young cuckoos. Measured when tagging (N = 13). Tag activation is given as days after tagging. (DOCX)
Data
Location quality of positions included in the study. Number of locations and location quality (LQ A-B, 0–3; CLS 2007–2015) of cuckoos tracked from leaving the breeding areas to arrival on the winter grounds (as the southernmost stationary position) or end of transmission. (DOCX)
Data
Supplementary Wind Analysis. (DOCX)
Data
Fate of tagged cuckoos across studies. Logistic regression (Generalised Linear Model with logit link and binomial error distribution) of Finland post-fledging vs. UK post-fledging: parameter estimate of difference in location: 1.17; SD = 0.70; z = 1.68, P = 0.09. Finland juvenile autumn vs. UK adult autumn: parameter estimate of difference in age/l...
Article
Full-text available
Background Co-evolutionary arms-races result in spatio-temporally dynamic relationships between interacting species, e.g., brood parasites and their avian hosts. However, majority of avian co-evolutionary studies are limited to “snap-shots” of a single breeding season in an open-nesting host. In a long-term study (11 breeding seasons), we explored...
Article
Maternal inheritance via the female-specific W chromosome was long ago proposed as a potential solution to the evolutionary enigma of co-existing host-specific races (or 'gentes') in avian brood parasites. Here we report the first unambiguous evidence for maternal inheritance of egg colouration in the brood-parasitic common cuckoo Cuculus canorus....
Data
Supplementary Figures 1-2, Supplementary Tables 1-10 and Supplementary References
Article
Full-text available
Common Cuckoos (Cuculus canorus) are obligate brood parasites that lay their eggs in nests of other species and use these hosts to raise their parasitic offspring. Two key adaptations that increase their reproductive success are (1) the capacity for cuckoos to lay large numbers of eggs and thereby parasitize many nests per year, and (2) the ability...
Article
Full-text available
Life-history theory posits that the evolutionary responses of hosts to avian brood parasitism will be shaped by the extent of the fitness costs of parasitism. Previous modelling work predicted that hosts of more virulent parasites should eject foreign eggs, irrespective of clutch size, whereas hosts of less virulent parasites, with smaller clutch s...
Article
Conspecific brood parasitism (CBP) is an alternative reproductive tactic in several animal taxa. Recently the role of kinship in CBP has been in focus, and some studies have demonstrated high host–parasite relatedness in avian CBP systems. However, high natal and breeding site fidelity of hosts and parasites complicates the interpretation of previo...
Article
Full-text available
Avian brood parasites commonly exploit hosts that have accessible nests and a soft insect diet. Common Cuckoo (Cuculus canorus) hosts were traditionally classified as suitable if both parameters were fulfilled or unsuitable if one, or both, were not. In line with this traditional view, hole-nesting tits (Paridae) have become a text-book example of...
Article
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Changes in the timing of reproduction of birds should provide good evidence of large-scale climate fluctuations. However, geographically separate populations of one species may respond variably. We analyzed egg laying dates of nine Eurasian populations of the Common Redstart Phoenicurus phoenicurus collected between 1969 and 2010. The timing of bre...
Article
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Sex allocation theory and empirical evidence both suggest that natural selection should favour maternal control of offspring sex ratio in relation to their ability to invest in the offspring. Generalist parasites constitute a particularly interesting group to test this theory as different females commonly utilize different host species showing larg...
Article
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Avian brood parasites lay their eggs in other birds' nests and impose considerable fitness costs on their hosts. Historically and scientifically, the best studied example of circumventing host defences is the mimicry of host eggshell colour by the common cuckoo (Cuculus canorus). Yet the chemical basis of eggshell colour similarity, which impacts h...
Article
Full-text available
Obligate brood parasitic birds lay their eggs in nests of other species and parasite eggs typically have evolved greater structural strength relative to host eggs. Increased mechanical strength of the parasite eggshell is an adaptation that can interfere with puncture ejection behaviours of discriminating hosts. We investigated whether hardness of...
Article
Conspecific brood parasitism (CBP) has been identified as an integral life history component in birds. Recent empirical and theoretical studies suggest that nest predation is an important ecological factor affecting the occurrence and evolution of CBP; however, behavioural responses of parasites to nest predation remain unexplored. Here we report o...
Article
Conspecific brood parasitism (CBP) is an important alternative breeding strategy for gaining reproductive output in birds. While interactions between hosts and parasites and consequences of CBP to breeding success of both parties have been studied a lot, the roles of host characteristics and nest site characteristics in CBP have received less atten...
Article
Full-text available
The brood parasitic common cuckoo Cuculus canorus has a history of coevolution that involves numerous passerine hosts, but today only a subset is known to be regularly parasitised in any area. In some hosts, there is significant variation in the occurrence of parasitism between populations, but still individuals in non-parasitised populations show...
Article
Abstract Previous studies have shown that the tendency to reject parasitic eggs among certain hosts is strongly dependent on the degree of similarity with own eggs, whereas other conditional cues do not affect rejection decisions. This paper examines whether two such hosts, the closely related brambling and chaffinch, show a different tendency to r...
Article
Full-text available
Hatchlings of some virulent brood parasitic birds have evolved to eliminate host offspring. We experimentally studied the dynamics and potential costs of the egg eviction behavior of hatchlings of the common cuckoo Cuculus canorus in broods of common redstarts Phoenicurus phoenicurus, a cavity nesting host. Eliminating the labor of egg tossing per...
Article
Eadie (1989) developed a method based on variation between females in egg length, width and weight to detect conspecific brood parasitism in the field: using these three egg measures, Euclidean distance between all pairs of eggs within a clutch is calculated, and if maximum Euclidean distance (MED) between any two eggs exceeds a threshold value the...
Article
Full-text available
El parasitismo de nidada estimula la selección de mecanismos de defensa que aumentan la adecuación biológica del huésped. Por lo tanto, las poblaciones de huéspedes bajo diferentes presiones de parasitismo pueden expresar niveles diferentes de defensa contra el parasitismo de nidada. Evaluamos las respuesta de rechazo de poblaciones actualmente par...
Article
Full-text available
Chicks of some avian brood parasites show high virulence by eliminating all host progeny in the nest whereas others develop in the presence of host nestmates. Common cuckoo (Cuculus canorus) chicks are typically highly virulent parasites as they attempt to evict all host eggs and chicks soon after hatching. However, several features of nest design,...
Article
Full-text available
The common cuckoo has several host-specific races, each with a distinctive egg that tends to match its host's eggs. Here, we show that the host-race specializing on reed warblers also has a host-specific nestling adaptation. In playback experiments, the nestling cuckoos responded specifically to the reed warbler's distinctive 'churr' alarm (given w...
Article
Brood parasitism selects for defensive mechanisms that enhance host fitness. Therefore, host populations under different parasitism pressures may express different levels of defense against brood parasites. We tested the rejection responses of currently parasitized and unparasitized Common Redstart (Phoenicurus phoenicurus) populations in Finland t...
Article
Full-text available
During fieldwork at Lake Sic (46°57'N, 23°54'E), Romania, in the summer of 2003, we observed a strange incident of nest reuse in the Great Reed Warbler Acrocephalus arundinaceus. After first laying a complete clutch of five eggs and then ejecting an experimentally added parasite egg together with two of its own eggs, a new clutch was initiated in t...
Article
Hole-nesting habits of redstarts Phoenicurus phoenicurus make laying difficult for parasitic cuckoo Cuculus canorus females and eviction of host eggs difficult for the cuckoo hatchling, causing fitness costs of cuckoo parasitism to be lower than those reported for open nesting hosts. Redstarts have recognition problems when confronted with real cuc...
Article
We examined redstart Phoenicurus phoenicurus populations over a period of fifteen years to study interactions between the cuckoo Cuculus canorus and its cavity-nesting host. Over 380 redstart nests were checked and more than 100 cuckoo eggs were found during the study period. The average parasitism rate was 20%. The cuckoos’ breeding success was ex...

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