Duets convey information about pair and individual identities in a Neotropical bird.

IF 2 2区 生物学 Q2 ZOOLOGY
Current Zoology Pub Date : 2024-10-21 eCollection Date: 2025-08-01 DOI:10.1093/cz/zoae064
Pedro Diniz, Edvaldo F Silva-Jr, Gianlucca S Rech, Pedro H L Ribeiro, André C Guaraldo, Regina H Macedo, Paulo S Amorim
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Abstract

Vocal individuality is essential for social discrimination but has been poorly studied in animals that produce communal signals (duets or choruses). Song overlapping and temporal coordination make the assessment of individuality in communal signals more complex. In addition, selection may favor the accurate identification of pairs over individuals by receivers in year-round territorial species with duetting and long-term pair bonding. Here, we studied pair and individual vocal signatures in the polyphonal duets of rufous horneros Furnarius rufus, a Neotropical bird known for its long-term pair bonds. Hornero partners engage in duets to deter territorial intruders and protect their partnership year-round and can discern duets from neighbors versus strangers. Using a dataset of 471 duets from 43 pairs in 2 populations, we measured fine-scale acoustic features across different duet levels (e.g., complete duets to non-overlapping syllable parts) and analysis levels (pair or individual). Permuted linear discriminant function analyses classified pairs and individuals more accurately than expected by chance (means: 45% and 47% vs. 4 and 2%). Pair identity explained more variance in the multivariate acoustic features of duets than individual or population identities. The initial frequency of the duet showed strong potential for encoding pair identity. The acoustic traits contributing most to individual vocal signatures varied between sexes, which might facilitate the simultaneous assessment of duetters' identities by receivers. Our study indicates that vocal individuality may exist even in species with intricate and innate communal signals and elucidates the mechanisms employed by horneros in their social discrimination ability.

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二重唱传递了新热带鸟类的配对和个体身份信息。
声音的个性对社会歧视至关重要,但对产生公共信号(二重唱或合唱)的动物的研究很少。歌曲重叠和时间协调使得对公共信号中个性的评估变得更加复杂。此外,在全年有领地的物种中,选择可能更倾向于接受者对配对的准确识别,而不是个体,这些物种有二重唱和长期的配对关系。在这里,我们研究了棕角鸟(一种以长期配对而闻名的新热带鸟类)的复调二重唱中的成对和个体声音特征。黄蜂伴侣通过二重唱来阻止领地入侵者,全年保护它们的伴侣关系,并能分辨出邻居和陌生人的二重唱。使用来自2个种群43对的471对二重唱的数据集,我们测量了不同二重唱水平(例如,完整的二重唱到不重叠的音节部分)和分析水平(成对或单个)的精细声学特征。排列线性判别函数分析对配对和个体的分类比预期的更准确(平均值:45%和47% vs. 4%和2%)。与个体或群体身份相比,配对身份更能解释二重唱多变量声学特征的差异。二重唱的初始频率表现出较强的编码对同一性潜力。对个人声音特征贡献最大的声学特征在性别之间是不同的,这可能有助于接受者同时评估duduters的身份。我们的研究表明,即使在具有复杂和先天的公共信号的物种中,声音个性也可能存在,并阐明了犀鸟在其社会辨别能力中所采用的机制。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Current Zoology
Current Zoology Agricultural and Biological Sciences-Animal Science and Zoology
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
9.10%
发文量
111
审稿时长
6 weeks
期刊介绍: About the Journal Current Zoology (formerly Acta Zoologica Sinica, founded in 1935) is an open access, bimonthly, peer-reviewed international journal of zoology. It publishes review articles and research papers in the fields of ecology, evolution and behaviour. Current Zoology is sponsored by Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, along with the China Zoological Society.
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