When a Brown-headed Cowbird hatches from its egg, an identity crisis seems inevitable. Cowbirds are brood parasites, meaning that rather than raise their young themselves, they ditch their eggs in other species鈥 nests and allow these forced foster parents to do the tough work of chick-rearing. Baby cowbirds grow up with families that neither look nor act anything like them鈥攕ometimes in habitats in which cowbirds typically don鈥檛 even live.
鈥淐owbirds have to figure out who they are without their biological parents,鈥 ecologist says. The shocking thing is that somehow, most of them do鈥攁nd in , Louder shows how. Like human teenagers, young cowbirds sneak out at night鈥攖hough unlike human teenagers, these chicks鈥 evening rendezvous seem to be with members of their own family.
In laboratory experiments, cowbirds and other brood parasites that spend too much time with their foster families end up learning their host species鈥 songs, picking up their behaviors, and attempting to mate with them. In the wild, though, they鈥檙e somehow able to resist this鈥攂y the time they鈥檙e about a month old, they鈥檝e learned to act like cowbirds, and they know to mate with their own species. The more Louder looked into the question of how they do it, though, the more he realized we really don鈥檛 know. 鈥淚t鈥檚 kind of bothered people for a long time,鈥 he says.
Louder recently published a study that that cowbird moms don鈥檛 totally abandon their young after laying their eggs, but keep tabs on them and even use the failure or success of different nests to inform their decisions about where to lay future broods. His colleague suggested that these watchful mother birds may also be keeping their chicks from getting too close to their hosts. Maybe, the team thought, adult cowbirds have some contact with their offspring, which is how the chicks learn the ways of the cowbird.
To test that idea, the researchers to adult cowbirds and their young. The data revealed that the juveniles didn鈥檛 follow older birds away from the nests and rarely ventured to their mothers鈥 homes. Instead, they go on nighttime rendezvous.
鈥淭hey seemed to, just one night out of the blue when they were about 20-25 days old, say 鈥極h man, I need to go somewhere,鈥欌 Louder says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 almost like zugunruhe, or migratory restlessness.鈥
The data that young cowbirds leave the host nests shortly after sundown and roost overnight in the fields where the species typically lives before returning to their foster families the next day.
鈥淲hen I saw them do it, I was just shocked. You鈥檙e gonna leave in the middle of the night to go somewhere you鈥檝e never been?鈥 Louder says. 鈥淭o me, it just seems that would be the most dangerous time to do this, and that鈥檚 what led us to believe that it鈥檚 extremely important.鈥
The team thinks these night flights鈥攚hich may be spurred by an innate preference for roosting in fields鈥攇ive the cowbirds some independence from their foster parents and keeps them from becoming something they鈥檙e not. Since adult cowbirds roost together at night in the same fields, the young birds鈥 excursions could also give them the opportunity to mingle with their own species and learn the right behaviors.
Louder thinks his results help show that even parasites have to work hard to survive. 鈥淭here's this weird animosity towards cowbirds among the public,鈥 he says, but in his mind, it鈥檚 not deserved. Not only do the adults have to trick the hosts, sneak their eggs in, and keep an eye on different nests, but the chicks have to put some effort in just to learn to sing, forage and act like cowbirds.
鈥淭hese guys are really cool. They have these crazy behaviors and what they're doing is really complex,鈥 he says. 鈥淚f this was easy, everybody would do it.鈥