4.2 Article

Responses to Variation in Song Length by Male White-Crowned Sparrows

Journal

ETHOLOGY
Volume 118, Issue 1, Pages 24-32

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1439-0310.2011.01979.x

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Funding

  1. NSF [IBN04-15842]

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Bird song has the potential to convey a variety of information about the singer, including the singers current motivational state. A recent review by Searcy & Beecher (2009) (Anim. Behav. 78, 2009; 1281) emphasized how little is currently known about whether song functions as an aggressive signal in territorial interactions. A recent observational study of song length variation in the Puget Sound white-crowned sparrow reported that males shorten the terminal trill in their single song type while singing close by another male, and shorten the trill even further immediately before chasing the opponent. Here, we report the results of two song playback experiments designed to test whether males distinguish the differences in song length that occur in agonistic and non-agonistic contexts. We found that males gave stronger responses, as measured by close approach distances, to either a series of songs increasing in duration (compared to a series decreasing in duration), or to long loud songs (compared to short soft songs). In both experiments, males gave weaker responses to the stimuli hypothesized to be more aggressive. Males shortened their songs in response to both simulated intrusions. Combined with the observational data on song variation in different contexts, these experiments support the conclusion that song length variation contains information about aggressive motivation in the white-crowned sparrow.

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