4.7 Article

Learning fine-tunes a specific response of nestlings to the parental alarm calls of their own species

Journal

PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume 271, Issue 1554, Pages 2297-2304

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2004.2835

Keywords

alarm calls; vocal communication; learning; nestling vocalizations; parental behaviour; signal detection

Funding

  1. Natural Environment Research Council [NER/A/S/2001/00979] Funding Source: researchfish

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Parent birds often give alarm calls when a predator approaches their nest. However, it is not clear whether these alarms function to warn nestlings, nor is it known whether nestling responses are species-specific. The parental alarms of reed warblers, Acrocephalus scirpaceus ('churr'), dunnocks, Prunella modularis ('tseep'), and robins, Erithacus rubecula ('seee') are very different. Playback experiments revealed that nestlings of all three species ceased begging only in response to conspecific alarm calls. These differences between species in response are not simply a product of differences in raising environment, because when newly hatched dunnocks and robins were cross-fostered to nests of the other two species, they did not develop a response to their foster species' alarms. Instead, they still responded specifically to their own species' alarms. However, their response was less strong than that of nestlings raised normally by their own species. We suggest that, as in song development, a neural template enables nestlings to recognize features of their own species' signals from a background of irrelevant sounds, but learning then fine-tunes the response to reduce recognition errors.

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