“…Once hatched, the brood parasitic chicks greatly reduce the breeding success of the hosts, by outcompeting the hosts' offspring or by killing their nestmates altogether (Davies, 2000). Therefore, hosts have evolved multifaceted defenses to avoid being parasitized (Feeney et al, 2012;Welbergen & Davies, 2009), such as building highly concealed nests (Jelínek et al, 2014;Mérő & Žuljević, , 2019, gathering social information regarding the presence of brood parasites (Lawson et al, 2020(Lawson et al, , 2021Thorogood & Davies, 2012, and by mobbing adult brood parasites (Požgayová et al, 2009;Trnka et al, 2013). Brood parasites bypass these defenses by fast egg-laying (Jelínek et al, 2021), color dimorphism (Thorogood & Davies, 2012), visual and acoustic mimicry (Marton et al, 2021;Trnka & Prokop, 2012;Welbergen & Davies, 2008;York & Davies, 2017), and sometimes also by retaliatory strikes and brood destruction (Soler et al, 1995).…”