Abstract

Charles Darwin posited that secondary sexual characteristics result from competition to attract mates. In male songbirds, specialized vocalizations represent secondary sexual characteristics of particular importance because females prefer songs at specific frequencies, amplitudes, and duration. For birds living in human-dominated landscapes, historic selection for song characteristics that convey fitness may compete with novel selective pressures from anthropogenic noise. Here we show that black-capped chickadees (Poecile atricapillus) use shorter, higher-frequency songs when traffic noise is high, and longer, lower-frequency songs when noise abates. We suggest that chickadees balance opposing selective pressures by use low-frequency songs to preserve vocal characteristics of dominance that repel competitors and attract females, and high frequency songs to increase song transmission when their environment is noisy. The remarkable vocal flexibility exhibited by chickadees may be one reason that they thrive in urban environments, and such flexibility may also support subsequent genetic adaptation to an increasingly urbanized world.

Highlights

  • Darwin attributed the presence of exaggerated visual and acoustic traits in males of many animals to sexual selection, which he distinguished from natural selection because of the apparent irrelevance, and even detriment, of those traits for survival [1]

  • We addressed the possibility of a plastic response to dual selective pressures in the black-capped chickadee (Poecile atricapillus), a forest-dependent species that has successfully adapted to urban habitats throughout North America [12]

  • A general linear mixed model (GLMM) revealed that bee note peak frequency increased by 13.81 Hz/decibel as average noise levels increased (z = 2.01, P = 0.04; Figure 1), but did not vary significantly with any other variable (z,1.10, P.0.27)

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Summary

Introduction

Darwin attributed the presence of exaggerated visual and acoustic traits in males of many animals to sexual selection, which he distinguished from natural selection because of the apparent irrelevance, and even detriment, of those traits for survival [1]. Because sexuallyselected traits influence survival, stabilizing selection may limit the ‘runaway’ process that would otherwise apply to sexuallyselected traits [4]. Such stabilizing selection appears to apply to bird song, for which females prefer population-specific ideals of note composition, frequency and duration [5]. Despite the strong historic selection for particular song characteristics, birds living in more urbanized landscapes appear to be under selection to overcome the effects of anthropogenic noise. The low-frequency noise caused by vehicle traffic is a particular problem, and bird species that persist adjacent to roads appear to produce higher-frequency songs than species that live in the surrounding landscape [6]. One potential mechanism to balance sexual selection with masking anthropogenic noise is to switch plastically between ‘modified’ and ‘normal’ signals as environmental conditions change

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