非洲南部欧洲蜜雕(Pernis apivorus)的发声

A. Branfield
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引用次数: 0

摘要

与一些消息来源相反,欧洲蜂鹰在非洲并不是沉默的。这项研究记录了51个物种在非洲大陆发声的记录。鸣叫是由单独遇到的鸟(n=30)和与另一只欧洲蜂鸟(n=22)一起时发出的。在已知年龄的地方,11只鸣叫的鸟是成年鸟,10只是幼鸟。在可获得细节的情况下,大多数叫声是由飞行中的鸟类发出的(n=30),其中11只来自栖息的鸟类,2只来自飞行和栖息时听到的叫声。在大多数情况下,没有记录鸟类的性别(n=42),幼鸟(1岁和2岁)很难确定性别;在剩下的人中,有两名男性和九名女性。大多数呼叫是该物种的典型飞行呼叫(n=43),其次是明显的警报呼叫(n=7)。大多数叫声是在飞行中发出的(n=31), 19只是单只鸟发出的,12只是两只鸟在飞行中发出的。两只鸟的叫声与在繁殖地所描述的飞行表演相似,尤其发生在夏末(12月以后;25/40的记录)。在两只欧洲蜂鸟之间的相互作用中,叫声的比例相对较高(n=18)。两只鸟一起鸣叫并伴有空中表演的现象在非洲以前从未被描述过,这表明成年鸟在非洲当地迁徙或繁殖活动之前就已经配对了。雏鸟之间的叫声在本质上可能更具有社会性,而不是性。近年来,南非欧洲蜂鸟的记录大幅增加(5倍),可能增加了同种相互作用的机会。这也增加了繁殖的可能性,尤其是在气候更为温和的南非。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Vocalizations of European Honey Buzzards (Pernis apivorus) in Southern Africa
Contrary to some sources, the European Honey Buzzard is not silent in Africa. This study documents 51 records of the species vocalizing on the continent. Vocalizations were given by birds apparently encountered alone (n=30) and when accompanied by another European Honey Buzzard (n=22). Where age was known, 11 calling birds were adults and ten were juveniles. Where details were available, most calls were given by birds in flight (n=30), with 11 from perched birds and two from birds heard calling while both in flight and perched. In most cases the sex of the bird was not recorded (n=42) and young birds (first- and second-years) are difficult to sex with certainty; of the remainder, two were males and nine were females. Most calls were the typical flight call of the species (n=43), with apparent alarm calls (n=7) the next most frequent call type. Most calls were delivered in flight (n=31), 19 by single birds and 12 by two birds together in flight. The calling by two birds was associated with flight displays similar to those described on the breeding grounds and occurred especially in late summer (December onwards; 25/40 records). A relatively high proportion of calls occurred during interactions between two European Honey Buzzards (n=18). Calling associated with two birds together and accompanied by aerial displays has not been described in Africa before, and is suggestive of either early pairing of the adult birds prior to migration or breeding activity locally in Africa. Vocalizations between young birds though may be more social as opposed to sexual in nature. The large (5X) increase in records of European Honey Buzzards in South Africa in recent years likely increases the chances of conspecific interaction. It also raises the possibility of breeding, especially in more-temperate South Africa.
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