Authors
Branislav Igic, Mark E Hauber, Csaba Moskát, Tomas Grim, Matthew D Shawkey, Petr Procházka, Marcel Honza
Publication date
2017/3
Journal
Journal of Zoology
Volume
301
Issue
3
Pages
165-173
Description
Common cuckoos Cuculus canorus are obligate brood parasites that lay their eggs in the nests of other (host) species. To increase the likelihood of successful parasitism, common cuckoos lay eggs with thicker and structurally stronger eggshells than those of their hosts and non‐parasitic relatives. Although hatching from thicker eggshells requires greater effort and may impose physiological costs on cuckoo embryos during hatching, it is unclear whether cuckoo eggshells are indeed thicker at the time of hatching. This is because avian embryos decalcify the innermost eggshell layer (mammillary layer) for organ development during embryogenesis, reducing eggshell thickness and making hatching easier. Therefore, common cuckoo eggshells may undergo a greater degree of decalcification during embryonic development to facilitate hatching from an initially thicker shelled egg. We used scanning electron …
Total citations
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