Journal
BEHAVIOUR
Volume 147, Issue 3, Pages 333-351Publisher
BRILL
DOI: 10.1163/000579509X12549112908535
Keywords
neighbour-stranger discrimination; song sharing; repertoire size; dialect; within-song type variation
Categories
Funding
- State Committee for Scientific Research [3 P04C 083 25]
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Neighbour-stranger (hereafter N-S) discrimination in birds is common and has most likely evolved to settle repeated disputes more efficiently and without physical fights. We tested whether an oscine bird, the ortolan bunting (Emberiza hortulana), with a small repertoire size from a population with a local dialect and a high level of song sharing is able to discriminate between the songs of neighbours and strangers. We performed playback experiments with eighteen males to measure the response to a repeated single rendition of a single song type derived randomly from a repertoire of a neighbour or stranger. Subjects responded more aggressively to the songs of strangers than neighbours (faster approach, more calls and songs uttered), suggesting that ortolan buntings can discriminate between the songs of neighbours and strangers. Our results also suggest that cues for N-S discrimination may be based on individual within-song type variation regardless of song-type repertoire composition. We contrast our results with an earlier study where ortolan buntings from a non-dialect population were tested. Finally, we predict a positive relationship between the level of song sharing and within-song type variation, which may be maintained by selection for N-S discrimination in songbirds with small and moderate repertoire sizes.
Authors
I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.
Reviews
Recommended
No Data Available