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      Personality, recognition cues, and nest sanitation in obligate avian brood parasitism: what do we know and what comes next?

      editorial
      Current Zoology
      Oxford University Press

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          Most cited references38

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          An alternative "description of personality": the big-five factor structure.

          In the 45 years since Cattell used English trait terms to begin the formulation of his "description of personality," a number of investigators have proposed an alternative structure based on 5 orthogonal factors. The generality of this 5-factor model is here demonstrated across unusually comprehensive sets of trait terms. In the first of 3 studies, 1,431 trait adjectives grouped into 75 clusters were analyzed; virtually identical structures emerged in 10 replications, each based on a different factor-analytic procedure. A 2nd study of 479 common terms grouped into 133 synonym clusters revealed the same structure in 2 samples of self-ratings and in 2 samples of peer ratings. None of the factors beyond the 5th generalized across the samples. In the 3rd study, analyses of 100 clusters derived from 339 trait terms suggest their potential utility as Big-Five markers in future studies.
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            An Experimental and Teleonomic Investigation of Avian Brood Parasitism

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              Embryonic learning of vocal passwords in superb fairy-wrens reveals intruder cuckoo nestlings.

              How do parents recognize their offspring when the cost of making a recognition error is high? Avian brood parasite-host systems have been used to address this question because of the high cost of parasitism to host fitness. We discovered that superb fairy-wren (Malurus cyaneus) females call to their eggs, and upon hatching, nestlings produce begging calls with key elements from their mother's "incubation call." Cross-fostering experiments showed highest similarity between foster mother and nestling calls, intermediate similarity with genetic mothers, and least similarity with parasitic Horsfield's bronze-cuckoo (Chalcites basalis) nestlings. Playback experiments showed that adults respond to the begging calls of offspring hatched in their own nest and respond less to calls of other wren or cuckoo nestlings. We conclude that wrens use a parent-specific password learned embryonically to shape call similarity with their own young and thereby detect foreign cuckoo nestlings. Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Curr Zool
                Curr Zool
                czoolo
                Current Zoology
                Oxford University Press
                1674-5507
                2396-9814
                December 2021
                20 September 2021
                20 September 2021
                : 67
                : 6
                : 621-623
                Affiliations
                Ministry of Education Key Laboratory for Ecology of Tropical Islands, Key Laboratory of Tropical Animal and Plant Ecology of Hainan Province, College of Life Sciences, Hainan Normal University , Haikou 571158, China
                Author notes
                Address correspondence to Canchao Yang. E-mail: ccyang@ 123456hainnu.edu.cn
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9405-2749
                Article
                zoab079
                10.1093/cz/zoab079
                8599052
                fbe3d7e3-be28-4ff5-8983-fa30dff80200
                © The Author(s) (2021). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Editorial Office, Current Zoology.

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License ( https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com

                History
                : 30 August 2021
                Page count
                Pages: 3
                Funding
                Funded by: Hainan Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China;
                Award ID: 320CXTD437
                Funded by: National Natural Science Foundation of China, DOI 10.13039/501100001809;
                Award ID: 31672303
                Categories
                Special Column: Avian brood parasite/host interactions: behavior, personality and mechanism
                Guest Editor: Canchao YANG
                AcademicSubjects/SCI01320
                AcademicSubjects/SCI01130

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