4.5 Article

Complex coevolution of wing, tail, and vocal sounds of courting male bee hummingbirds

Journal

EVOLUTION
Volume 72, Issue 3, Pages 630-646

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/evo.13432

Keywords

Biomechanics; dynamical system; flight; locomotion induced sound; rectrix; remix; sonation; Trochilidae; wind tunnel

Funding

  1. NSF [IOS-0920353]

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Phenotypic characters with a complex physical basis may have a correspondingly complex evolutionary history. Males in the bee hummingbird clade court females with sound from tail-feathers, which flutter during display dives. On a phylogeny of 35 species, flutter sound frequency evolves as a gradual, continuous character on most branches. But on at least six internal branches fall two types of major, saltational changes: mode of flutter changes, or the feather that is the sound source changes, causing frequency to jump from one discrete value to another. In addition to their tail instruments, males also court females with sound from their syrinx and wing feathers, and may transfer or switch instruments over evolutionary time. In support of this, we found a negative phylogenetic correlation between presence of wing trills and singing. We hypothesize this transference occurs because wing trills and vocal songs serve similar functions and are thus redundant. There are also three independent origins of self-convergence of multiple signals, in which the same species produces both a vocal (sung) frequency sweep, and a highly similar nonvocal sound. Moreover, production of vocal, learned song has been lost repeatedly. Male bee hummingbirds court females with a diverse, coevolving array of acoustic traits.

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