4.5 Article

Acoustic cues used for species recognition can differ between sexes and sibling species: evidence in shearwaters

Journal

ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR
Volume 84, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.anbehav.2012.04.039

Keywords

acoustic communication; Calonectris; information coding; playback experiment; Puffinus; seabird; shearwater; species-specific recognition

Funding

  1. CNRS
  2. UE Life project [LIFE03NAT/F000105]
  3. Govern deles Illes Balears
  4. Big Mat company
  5. Institut Universitaire de France

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In birds, species identity is one of the most important messages conveyed by vocalizations and is the basis for effective acoustic communication between conspecifics. Acoustic analyses can reveal which acoustic cues signal species identity, that is, the cues that could potentially be used by birds for species recognition, whereas playback experiments aim to determine which cues birds actually use for species recognition. Few studies have compared the acoustic cues used for species-specific recognition between closely related species and between sexes within species. We focused on three shearwater species (Puffinus yelkouan, Puffinus mauretanicus, Calonectris d. diomedea) breeding in the Mediterranean basin. In a previous study we showed that males and females of these three closely related species produce broadband calls strongly modulated in frequency and share a wide range of acoustic features signalling species identity. Here, we investigated whether these birds use similar acoustic cues for species recognition. Playback experiments showed that these cues were more similar between species of the genus Puffinus that rely mainly on frequency modulation than between Puffinus and Calonectris species, the latter using mainly frequency spectrum-related cues. In spite of similarities between the Puffinus species, we found substantial differences, P. mauretanicus being more sensitive to frequency value modification than P. yelkouan. We also found that females of the three species rely on more acoustic parameters to identify species than males. Our results show that the species-specific recognition system can show significant differences between closely related species and between sexes. (C) 2012 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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