THE DUET CODE OF THE FEMALE BLACK-BELLIED WREN
In many duet-singing songbirds, paired birds combine their song types nonrandomly to form duet songs. Several different behavioral mechanisms could generate nonrandom song type associations in duets. I tested female Black-bellied Wrens (Thryothorus fasciatoventris) for one such mechanism: adherence...
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description | In many duet-singing songbirds, paired birds combine their song types nonrandomly to form duet songs. Several different behavioral mechanisms could generate nonrandom song type associations in duets. I tested female Black-bellied Wrens (Thryothorus fasciatoventris) for one such mechanism: adherence to a set of rules linking female response songs to male stimulus songs. I call this set of rules a “duet code.” Duets of free-living Black-bellied Wrens were recorded in 2001 and 2002. In 2003 I returned to the same territories and played the male song types from the recorded duets. Females answered male song stimuli as if duetting with the playback speaker. Although the known repertoires of females averaged 8.4 song types, each female sang only a single song type in response to each male song type. Random answering could not account for this pattern, supporting the hypothesis that females abide by duet codes. Females that were still paired with their mates from 2001–2002 answered 100% of their mate's songs with the same song types they had used previously, demonstrating that codes are stable over time. In contrast, females that were new to a territory answered an average of only 18% of their mate's song types with the same song type as the previous female, indicating that duet codes are individually distinctive. Duet participation by female Black-bellied Wrens represents a special kind of animal communication, in which discrete vocal signals consistently elicit discrete vocal responses according to an individually distinctive set of rules. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1650/0010-5422(2006)108[326:TDCOTF]2.0.CO;2 |
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Several different behavioral mechanisms could generate nonrandom song type associations in duets. I tested female Black-bellied Wrens (Thryothorus fasciatoventris) for one such mechanism: adherence to a set of rules linking female response songs to male stimulus songs. I call this set of rules a “duet code.” Duets of free-living Black-bellied Wrens were recorded in 2001 and 2002. In 2003 I returned to the same territories and played the male song types from the recorded duets. Females answered male song stimuli as if duetting with the playback speaker. Although the known repertoires of females averaged 8.4 song types, each female sang only a single song type in response to each male song type. Random answering could not account for this pattern, supporting the hypothesis that females abide by duet codes. Females that were still paired with their mates from 2001–2002 answered 100% of their mate's songs with the same song types they had used previously, demonstrating that codes are stable over time. In contrast, females that were new to a territory answered an average of only 18% of their mate's song types with the same song type as the previous female, indicating that duet codes are individually distinctive. 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Several different behavioral mechanisms could generate nonrandom song type associations in duets. I tested female Black-bellied Wrens (Thryothorus fasciatoventris) for one such mechanism: adherence to a set of rules linking female response songs to male stimulus songs. I call this set of rules a “duet code.” Duets of free-living Black-bellied Wrens were recorded in 2001 and 2002. In 2003 I returned to the same territories and played the male song types from the recorded duets. Females answered male song stimuli as if duetting with the playback speaker. Although the known repertoires of females averaged 8.4 song types, each female sang only a single song type in response to each male song type. Random answering could not account for this pattern, supporting the hypothesis that females abide by duet codes. Females that were still paired with their mates from 2001–2002 answered 100% of their mate's songs with the same song types they had used previously, demonstrating that codes are stable over time. In contrast, females that were new to a territory answered an average of only 18% of their mate's song types with the same song type as the previous female, indicating that duet codes are individually distinctive. Duet participation by female Black-bellied Wrens represents a special kind of animal communication, in which discrete vocal signals consistently elicit discrete vocal responses according to an individually distinctive set of rules.</description><subject>Animal behavior</subject><subject>Animal communication</subject><subject>behavioral mechanism</subject><subject>Bird songs</subject><subject>Birds</subject><subject>duet structure</subject><subject>Experiments</subject><subject>Female animals</subject><subject>female song</subject><subject>Females</subject><subject>interactive playback</subject><subject>Male animals</subject><subject>mapping function</subject><subject>Mating behavior</subject><subject>Mental stimulation</subject><subject>Ornithology</subject><subject>Singing</subject><subject>Single status</subject><subject>song type</subject><subject>Songbirds</subject><subject>Spectrograms</subject><subject>Thryothorus fasciatoventris</subject><subject>vocal 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WREN</title><author>Logue, David M</author></sort><facets><frbrtype>5</frbrtype><frbrgroupid>cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-b491t-931f6c491b48d48906e91605c540457d6b2f53e2271d0eb456f70c73e4e7b1b63</frbrgroupid><rsrctype>articles</rsrctype><prefilter>articles</prefilter><language>eng</language><creationdate>2006</creationdate><topic>Animal behavior</topic><topic>Animal communication</topic><topic>behavioral mechanism</topic><topic>Bird songs</topic><topic>Birds</topic><topic>duet structure</topic><topic>Experiments</topic><topic>Female animals</topic><topic>female song</topic><topic>Females</topic><topic>interactive playback</topic><topic>Male animals</topic><topic>mapping function</topic><topic>Mating behavior</topic><topic>Mental stimulation</topic><topic>Ornithology</topic><topic>Singing</topic><topic>Single status</topic><topic>song type</topic><topic>Songbirds</topic><topic>Spectrograms</topic><topic>Thryothorus fasciatoventris</topic><topic>vocal 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Several different behavioral mechanisms could generate nonrandom song type associations in duets. I tested female Black-bellied Wrens (Thryothorus fasciatoventris) for one such mechanism: adherence to a set of rules linking female response songs to male stimulus songs. I call this set of rules a “duet code.” Duets of free-living Black-bellied Wrens were recorded in 2001 and 2002. In 2003 I returned to the same territories and played the male song types from the recorded duets. Females answered male song stimuli as if duetting with the playback speaker. Although the known repertoires of females averaged 8.4 song types, each female sang only a single song type in response to each male song type. Random answering could not account for this pattern, supporting the hypothesis that females abide by duet codes. Females that were still paired with their mates from 2001–2002 answered 100% of their mate's songs with the same song types they had used previously, demonstrating that codes are stable over time. In contrast, females that were new to a territory answered an average of only 18% of their mate's song types with the same song type as the previous female, indicating that duet codes are individually distinctive. Duet participation by female Black-bellied Wrens represents a special kind of animal communication, in which discrete vocal signals consistently elicit discrete vocal responses according to an individually distinctive set of rules.</abstract><cop>Waco</cop><pub>Cooper Ornithological Society</pub><doi>10.1650/0010-5422(2006)108[326:TDCOTF]2.0.CO;2</doi><tpages>10</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record> |
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subjects | Animal behavior Animal communication behavioral mechanism Bird songs Birds duet structure Experiments Female animals female song Females interactive playback Male animals mapping function Mating behavior Mental stimulation Ornithology Singing Single status song type Songbirds Spectrograms Thryothorus fasciatoventris vocal communication |
title | THE DUET CODE OF THE FEMALE BLACK-BELLIED WREN |
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