Prolactin mediates behavioural rejection responses to avian brood parasitism

Even though adaptations resulting from co-evolutionary interactions between avian brood parasites and their hosts have been well studied, the hormonal mechanisms underlying behavioural host defences remain largely unexplored. Prolactin, the main hormone mediating avian parental behaviour, has been hypothesized to play a key role in the orchestration of host responses to brood parasitic eggs. Based on the positive association between plasma prolactin and parental attachment to eggs, decreasing levels of this hormone are expected to facilitate egg-rejection decisions in parasitized clutches. We tested this prediction by implanting Eurasian blackbirds (Turdus merula) females with an inhibitor of prolactin secretion, bromocriptine mesylate, to experimentally low their prolactin levels. We found that bromocriptine-treated females rejected mimetic model eggs at higher rates than placebo-treated individuals. To our knowledge, this is the first experimental evidence that host responses to brood parasitism are mediated by the primary endocrine pathway that orchestrates the expression of avian parental care.

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