4.3 Article

Are both notes of the common cuckoo's call necessary for familiarity recognition?

Journal

BEHAVIOURAL PROCESSES
Volume 157, Issue -, Pages 685-690

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.beproc.2018.03.017

Keywords

Neighbour-stranger discrimination; Dear-enemy effect; Individual recognition; Playback; Sound analysis; Acoustic manipulation

Funding

  1. National Research, Development and Innovation Office, Hungary [NN118194]
  2. US National Science Foundation [IOS 1456524]

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Common cuckoos (Cuculus canorus) are best known for their simple two-note calls (cu-coo), which are uttered only by males during the breeding season. A previous playback study revealed that territorial males were more tolerant toward playbacks of the calls of familiar, neighbouring individuals than toward unfamiliar, stranger simulated intruders, exhibiting the classical dear-enemy phenomenon. Here we experimentally assessed whether the acoustic cues for familiarity recognition are encoded in the first and/or second note of these simple calls. To do so, we played mixed sound files to radio-tagged cuckoos, where the first part of the two-note calls was taken from strangers and the second part from neighbours, or vice versa. As controls, we used behavioural data from two-note neighbour and two-note stranger call playbacks. Cuckoos responded consistently to the two types of mixed sound files. When either the first or second note of the call was taken from a stranger and the other note from a neighbour, they responded to these sound files similarly to two-note playbacks of strangers: they approached the speaker of the playbacks more closely and the calling response-latency to playbacks was longer than to familiar controls. These findings point to the importance of both notes in familiarity recognition. We conclude that familiarity recognition in male common cuckoos needs the complete structure of the two-note cuckoo call, which is characteristic for this species.

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