Abstract

Bird species often use flight calls to engage in social behavior, for instance maintain group cohesion and to signal individual identity, kin or social associations, or breeding status of the caller. Additional uses also exist, in particular among migrating songbirds for communication during nocturnal migration. However, our understanding of the information that these vocalizations convey is incomplete, especially in nocturnal scenarios. To examine whether information about signaler traits could be encoded in flight calls we quantified several acoustic characteristics from calls of a nocturnally migrating songbird, the American Redstart. We recorded calls from temporarily captured wild specimens during mist-netting at the Powdermill Avian Research Center in Rector, PA. We measured call similarity among and within individuals, genders, and age groups. Calls from the same individual were significantly more similar to one another than to the calls of other individuals, and calls were significantly more similar among individuals of the same sex than between sexes. Flight calls from hatching-year and after hatching-year individuals were not significantly different. Our results suggest that American Redstart flight calls may carry identifiers of gender and individual identity. To our knowledge, this is the first evidence of individuality or sexual dimorphism in the flight calls of a migratory songbird. Furthermore, our results suggest that flight calls may have more explicit functions beyond simple group contact and cohesion. Nocturnal migration may require coordination among numerous individuals, and the use of flight calls to transmit information among intra- and conspecifics could be advantageous. Applying approaches that account for such individual and gender information may enable more advanced research using acoustic monitoring.

Highlights

  • The wide array of ecological functions that bioacoustic communication serves is diverse and continually expanding as more studies augment our understanding

  • Calls collected from the same individual were significantly more similar to one another than to those made by other birds, and call similarity was higher within sexes than between sexes. These results suggest that American Redstart flight calls could encode individual and gender information

  • Nocturnal migration presumably prevents the use of any visual cues to identify members of a migratory group, and embedding identifying information in vocal signals may have utility for the signaler or receiver

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Summary

Introduction

The wide array of ecological functions that bioacoustic communication serves is diverse and continually expanding as more studies augment our understanding. Avian vocalizations frequently signal identifying information about kin or social associations, individual identity, or dominance rank [10,11,12]. This pattern has been observed in mammals (e.g. vervet monkeys, Chlorocebus pygerythrus [13]; sperm whales, Physeter macrocephalus [14]; killer whales, Orcinus orca [15]; dolphins, Delphinids (family) [16], and mechanically in social insects [17,18]. Despite extensive research on how avian vocalizations can encode identifying information about a signaler, most studies have been limited to resident or seasonal breeding populations, or to captive individuals

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