About this Research Topic
Visual signals between brood parasites and their hosts have received numerous studies, which have formed systematic theories. In comparison, the coevolution of acoustic signals between brood parasites and their hosts, which are also important in birds, have received considerably less attention. This Research Topic will investigate different aspects of parasitic and anti-parasitic adaptations on both visual and acoustic signals between brood parasites and their hosts through systematic studies. The visual signals include parasitic or anti-parasitic adaptations by visual cue, while the acoustic signals include begging call mimicry by parasite nestlings, vocal mimicry by parasite adults, production and communication of alarm or mobbing call toward parasite by host adults, vocal communication against parasite between host parents and offspring, and vocal recognition of parasite nestlings by host adults. By elucidating these problems, this Research Topic will improve our knowledge of the role of both visual and acoustic signals in avian brood parasitism.
We welcome the submission of original research and review articles focused on parasitic adaptations of brood parasites or anti-parasitic adaptation of hosts with reference to both visual and acoustic signals. In particular, we encourage submissions related to the themes outlined below, as they refer to aspects that have not yet been addressed or have received relatively little attention:
• Species or host race specialization of begging call mimicry in parasite nestlings;
• Vocal traits of parasite adults and their function in parasitic adaptation;
• Vocal recognition of parasite nestlings by hosts;
• Adaptation to the communication system between host parents and offspring by parasite nestlings;
• Social learning of vocal signals against parasites between conspecific individuals in a host species or between different host species;
• Evolutionary history of similar vocal traits between parasites and hosts.
Keywords: avian brood parasitism, acoustic mimicry, brood parasite, vocal communication, host, visual signals
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.