Mothers control egg color, while patterning reflects biparental variation tied to geographic and host context. This dual system stabilizes mimicry without necessarily driving speciation. 5/6
Mothers control egg color, while patterning reflects biparental variation tied to geographic and host context. This dual system stabilizes mimicry without necessarily driving speciation. 5/6
These nuclear loci allow local adaptation to hosts and geography, but they don’t drive full genomic separation between cuckoo host races. 4/6
These nuclear loci allow local adaptation to hosts and geography, but they don’t drive full genomic separation between cuckoo host races. 4/6
A candidate gene involved in eggshell coloration shows evidence of an ancient autosome-to-W translocation, while other nearby loci tie coloration to mitochondrial function and the heme pathway that produces pigments. 3/6
A candidate gene involved in eggshell coloration shows evidence of an ancient autosome-to-W translocation, while other nearby loci tie coloration to mitochondrial function and the heme pathway that produces pigments. 3/6
Common cuckoos parasitize over 100 host species, fueling an evolutionary arms race: hosts are under pressure to detect foreign eggs, while cuckoos refine their mimicry to escape detection. 2/6
Common cuckoos parasitize over 100 host species, fueling an evolutionary arms race: hosts are under pressure to detect foreign eggs, while cuckoos refine their mimicry to escape detection. 2/6