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1 December 2012 An Eastern Crowned Leaf Warbler Phylloscopus coronatus Nest parasitized by an Oriental Cuckoo Cuculus saturatus with a Reddish Egg in Hokkaido, Japan
Sayaka Mori, Yuka Kondo, Hiroyoshi Higuchi
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Abstract

The distributions of the Little Cuculus poliocephalus and Oriental C. saturatus cuckoos differ throughout Japan. In Honshu, the Little Cuckoo parasitizes mainly the Japanese Bush Warbler Cettia diphone and lays reddish mimetic eggs. The Oriental Cuckoo mainly parasitizes the Eastern Crowned Leaf Warbler Phylloscopus coronatus and lays whitish eggs. However, in central Hokkaido, where no Little Cuckoos breed, Oriental Cuckoos parasitize Japanese Bush Warblers as their main hosts, in whose nests they lay reddish eggs. Anecdotal evidence suggests that they also parasitize Eastern Crowned Leaf Warblers, laying reddish eggs, but this has not been confirmed. Here, we report the first complete evidence in which an Oriental Cuckoo chick, which hatched from a non-mimetic reddish egg, was raised by Eastern Crowned Leaf Warbler hosts in Hokkaido.

© The Ornithological Society of Japan 2012
Sayaka Mori, Yuka Kondo, and Hiroyoshi Higuchi "An Eastern Crowned Leaf Warbler Phylloscopus coronatus Nest parasitized by an Oriental Cuckoo Cuculus saturatus with a Reddish Egg in Hokkaido, Japan," Ornithological Science 11(2), 109-112, (1 December 2012). https://doi.org/10.2326/osj.11.109
Received: 19 October 2011; Accepted: 8 September 2012; Published: 1 December 2012
KEYWORDS
brood parasitism
Cuculus saturatus
Hokkaido
Phylloscopus coronatus
Reddish egg
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