Breeding bird density does not drive vocal individuality
Abstract
Abstract Many species produce individually specific vocalizations and sociality is a hypothesized driver of such individuality. Previous studies of how social variation influenced individuality focused on colonial or non-colonial avian species, and how social group size influenced individuality in sciurid rodents. Since sociality is an important driver of individuality, we expected that bird species that defend nesting territories in higher density neighborhoods should have more individually-distinctive calls than those that defend nesting territories in lower-density neighborhoods. We used Beecher’s information statistic to quantify individuality, and we examined the relationship between bird density (calculated with point-counts) and vocal individuality on seven species of passerines. We found non-significant relationships between breeding bird density and vocal individuality whether regressions were fitted on species values, or on phylogenetically-independent contrast values. From these results, we infer that while individuality may be explained by social factors, breeding bird density is unlikely to be generally important in driving the evolution of individually-specific vocalizations.
Local Knowledge Graph (15 entities)
Related Works
Items connected by shared entities, co-authorship, citations, or semantic similarity.
Can breeding bird density influence vocal individuality in bird song?
Social group size predicts the evolution of individuality
Does breeding bird density drive vocal individuality?
Data from: Individual life histories: Neither slow nor fast, just diverse
Data from: Extreme site fidelity as an optimal strategy in an unpredictable and homogeneous environment
Data from: Variation in season length and development time is sufficient to drive the emergence and coexistence of social and solitary behavioral strategies
Status of Gunison's [sic] sage grouse
Shrubland Ecosystem Genetics And Biodiversity: Proceedings
A New Hydrologic Perspective of How Beaver Ponds Function
Cited 10 times
References (30)
3 in Knowledge Hub, 27 external
