“…At the level of individual hosts, Weber’s law predicts that smaller, rather than larger, clutch sizes should yield more discriminating host responses ( Akre & Johnsen, 2014 ; Dixit et al, 2021 ). There is empirical evidence for this pattern both intraspecifically (e.g., Abolins-Abols & Hauber, 2020b ) and comparatively ( Hauber et al, 2022 ), but these single time-point patterns cannot be equated with the course of coevolutionary interactions as the cowbird eggs also evolve across time. In turn, regarding the role of a greater parasitism rate in increasing the accuracy of parasite–egg detection through lowering hosts’ rejection thresholds, the modeled pattern is intuitive in the sense that more selection by greater parasitism rate should result in more discriminating hosts (order of the lines, Figure 3 , bottom).…”