Kleptoparasitism (originally spelt clepto-parasitism,[1][2] meaning "parasitism by theft") is a form of feeding in which one animal deliberately takes food from another. The strategy is evolutionarily stable when stealing is less costly than direct feeding, such as when food is scarce or when victims are abundant. Many kleptoparasites are arthropods, especially bees and wasps, but including some true flies, dung beetles, bugs, and spiders. Cuckoo bees are specialized kleptoparasites which lay their eggs either on the pollen masses made by other bees, or on the insect hosts of parasitoid wasps. They are an instance of Emery's rule, which states that insect social parasites tend to be closely related to their hosts. The behavior occurs, too, in vertebrates including birds such as skuas, which persistently chase other seabirds until they disgorge their food, and carnivorous mammals such as spotted hyenas and lions. Other species opportunistically indulge in kleptoparasitism.
Strategy
Kleptoparasitism is a feeding strategy where one animal deliberately steals food from another. This may be intraspecific, involving stealing from members of the same species, or interspecific, from members of other species.[3][4] The term denotes a form of parasitism involving theft, from Greek κλέπτω (kléptō, 'steal').[5] The strategy has been widely studied in birds; in four families, all seabirds, the Fregatidae, Chionididae, Stercoraridae, and Laridae, it occurs in more than a quarter of the species.[6][4]
Such a strategy should only be followed if it is evolutionarily stable, meaning that it offers a selective advantage to individuals that practise it. Kleptoparasitism costs time and energy which could otherwise be spent directly on feeding, so this cost must be outweighed by the benefit in energy gained from the stolen food. Mathematical modelling suggests that when food is abundant, ordinary feeding is the best strategy; when food abundance falls below a critical level, kleptoparasitism suddenly becomes advantageous, and aggressive interactions become common. Similarly, when potential victims are rare or widely dispersed, the time needed to find them may not be justified by the food that might be stolen from them, resulting in frequency-dependent selection.[3][6]
Taxonomic distribution
Arthropods
Bees and wasps
There are many lineages of cuckoo bees, all of which lay their eggs in the nest cells of other bees, often within the same family.[7]Bombus bohemicus, for example, parasitises several other species in its genus, including B. terrestris, B. lucorum, and B. cryptarum.[8] These are instances of Emery's rule, named for the Italian entomologist Carlo Emery, which asserts that social parasites among insects, including kleptoparasites, tend to be closely related to their hosts.[9][10] The largest monophyletic lineage of kleptoparasitic bees is Nomadinae (a subfamily of Apidae), which comprises several hundred species in 35 genera.[11]
Others are dubbed kleptoparasitoids, namely parasitoids that select hosts that have been parasitized by another female. Kleptoparasitoids may make use of the punctures made by previous parasitoids on their hosts; may follow the trails or traces left by parasitoids to locate hosts; or use hosts already weakened by other parasitoids.[15]
Flies
Some true flies (Diptera) are kleptoparasites; the strategy is especially common in the subfamily Miltogramminae of the family Sarcophagidae. There are also some kleptoparasites in the familiesChloropidae and Milichiidae. Some adult milichiids, for example, visit spider webs where they scavenge on half-eaten stink bugs. Others are associated with robber flies (Asilidae), or Crematogasterants.[16] Flies in the genus Bengalia (Calliphoridae) steal food and pupae transported by ants and are often found beside their foraging trails.[17]Musca albina (Muscidae) reportedly shows kleptoparasitic behaviour, laying eggs only in dung balls being interred by one of several co-occurring dung-rolling scarab species.[18]
Dung beetles
Scarabdung beetles relocate large amounts of vertebrate dung, rolling balls of the material to their nests for their larvae to feed on. Several smaller species of dung beetle do not gather dung themselves but take it from the nests of larger species. For example, species of Onthophagus enter dung-balls while Scarabeus beetles are making them.[19]
True bugs
Many semiaquatic bugs (Heteroptera) are kleptoparasitic on their own species. In one study, whenever the bug Velia caprai (water cricket) took prey heavier than 7.9 g, other bugs of the same species joined it and successfully ate parts of the prey.[20]
Spiders
Kleptoparasitic spiders, which steal or feed on prey captured by other spiders, are known to occur in five families:
A few bird species are specialist kleptoparasites, while many others are opportunistic. Skuas (including jaegers) and frigatebirds rely heavily on chasing other seabirds to obtain food. Other species—including raptors, gulls, terns, coots, and some ducks and shorebirds—do so opportunistically. Among opportunists such as the roseate tern, parent birds involved in kleptoparasitism are more successful in raising broods than non-kleptoparasitic individuals.[22][23]Bald eagles have been seen attacking smaller raptors, such as ospreys, to steal fish from them.[24] Among passerine birds, masked shrikes have been recorded stealing food from wheatears,[25] and Eurasian blackbirds have been recorded stealing smashed snails from other thrushes.[22]
During seabird nesting seasons, frigatebirds soar above seabird colonies, waiting for parent birds to return to their nests with food for their young. As the returning birds approach the colony, the frigatebirds, which are fast and agile, swoop in to pursue them vigorously; they sometimes seize tropicbirds by their long tail plumes. The name frigatebird, as well as many of the frigatebirds' colloquial names, including man-o'-war bird and pirate of the sea, denote this behaviour.[26] However, the amount of food obtained by kleptoparasitism in the magnificent frigatebird may be marginal.[27]
Gulls are both perpetrators and victims of opportunistic kleptoparasitism, particularly during the breeding season. While the victim is most often another member of the same species, other (principally smaller) gulls and terns can also be targeted. In the Americas, as brown pelicans surface and empty the water from their bills, they sometimes have their food stolen by Heermann's gulls and laughing gulls, which lurk nearby and grab escaping food items.[28]Great black-backed gulls are skilled kleptoparasites, stealing from other gulls and from raptors. Several species of gull steal food from humans, for example takeaway food at seaside resorts.[29]
The flying cormorant has taken a fish from the one in the water.
Mammals
The relationship between spotted hyenas and lions, in which each species steals the other's kills,[30] is a form of kleptoparasitism.[20] Cheetahs are common targets. Bears, coyotes and wolves are very opportunistic and all have this behavior. Crab-eating macaques have also exhibited kleptoparasitic behaviors. All hyena species engage in this behavior when they can, as do jackals.[31] Human hunters may commonly take the remains of fresh kills from other carnivores, such as lions and Eurasian lynx.[32][33][34]Risso's dolphins have been observed charging "head-on" at sperm whales, causing them to open their mouths; it has been suggested that the observed harassment results in some regurgitation, and that the food is then eaten by the Risso's dolphins. The behaviour is rare and may be opportunistic.[35]
A cheetah has killed an impala (and eaten part of it), creating a target for kleptoparasitism.
A little later, hyenas have driven off the cheetah and are feeding.
^Proffitt, M., ed. (1997). "kleptoparasitism". Oxford English Dictionary. Additions Series. Vol. 3. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 145. ISBN978-0-19-860027-5.
^ abFurness, R. W. (1987). "Kleptoparasitism in seabirds". In Croxall, J. P. (ed.). Seabirds: feeding ecology and role in marine ecosystems. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN978-0521301787.
^Kreuter, Kirsten; Bunk, Elfi Bunk (2011). "How the social parasitic bumblebee Bombus bohemicus sneaks into power of reproduction". Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology. 66 (3): 475–486. doi:10.1007/s00265-011-1294-z. S2CID7124725.
^Emery, Carlo (1909). "Über den Ursprung der dulotischen, parasitischen und myrmekophilen Ameisen" [On the Origin of Dulotic, Parasitic, and Myrmecophilic Ants]. Biologisches Centralblatt (in German). 29: 352–362.
^Roig-Alsina, A. (1991). "Cladistic analysis of the Nomadinae s. str. with description of a new genus (Hymenoptera: Anthophoridae)". Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society. 64 (1): 23–37. JSTOR25085241.
^Dapporto, L.; Cervo, R.; Sledge, M.F.; Turillazzi, S. (2004). "Rank integration in dominance hierarchies of host colonies by the paper wasp social parasite Polistes sulcifer (Hymenoptera, Vespidae)". Journal of Insect Physiology. 50 (2–3). Elsevier BV: 217–223. Bibcode:2004JInsP..50..217D. doi:10.1016/j.jinsphys.2003.11.012. PMID15019524.
^Erler, S.; Lattorff, H. M. G. (2010). "The degree of parasitism of the bumblebee (Bombus terrestris) by cuckoo bumblebees (Bombus (Psithyrus) vestalis)". Insectes Sociaux. 57 (4): 371–377. doi:10.1007/s00040-010-0093-2. S2CID853556.
^Wild, A.L. & Brake, I. 2009. Field observations on Milichia patrizii ant-mugging flies (Diptera: Milichiidae: Milichiinae) in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. African Invertebrates50 (1): 205–212.[1]Archived 2009-05-15 at the Wayback Machine
^Sivinski, J., S. Marshall and E. Petersson (1999) Kleptoparasitism and phoresy in the diptera. Florida Entomologist82 (2) [2]Archived 2008-09-10 at the Wayback Machine
^Marshall, S.A. & Pont, A.C. (2013). The kleptoparasitic habits of Musca albina Wiedemann, 1830 (Diptera: Muscidae). African Invertebrates54(2): 427–430.[3]
^Hammond, P. M. (September 1976). "Kleptoparasitic Behaviour of Onthophagus suturalis Peringuey (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae) and Other Dung-Beetles". The Coleopterists Bulletin. 30 (3): 245–249. doi:10.5962/p.371983. JSTOR3999694.
^Shealer, David A.; Spendelow, Jeffrey A.; Hatfield, Jeff S.; Nisbet, Ian C. T. (2005). "The adaptive significance of stealing in a marine bird and its relationship to parental quality". Behavioral Ecology. 16 (2): 371–376. doi:10.1093/beheco/ari008. hdl:10.1093/beheco/ari008.
^Schoe, Marjolein; de Iongh, Hans H.; Croes, Barbara M. (6 Jul 2009). "Humans displacing lions and stealing their food in Bénoué National Park, North Cameroon". African Journal of Ecology. 47 (3). Blackwell: 445. Bibcode:2009AfJEc..47..445S. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2028.2008.00975.x.
^Smultea, Mari A.; Bacon, Cathy E.; Lomac-MacNair, Kate; Visser, Fleur; Bredvik, Jessica (2014). "Rare Mixed-Species Associations Between Sperm Whales and Risso's and Northern Right Whale Dolphins Off the Southern California Bight: Kleptoparasitism and Social Parasitism?". Northwestern Naturalist. 95 (1): 43–49. doi:10.1898/nwn13-11.1. ISSN1051-1733. S2CID86227330.