Abstract

Many animals live in a communication network, an environment where individuals can obtain information about competitors or potential mates by observing interactions between conspecifics. In such an environment, interactants might benefit by changing their signalling behaviour in the presence of an audience. This audience effect seems widespread among species, has been observed during various types of interaction (e.g. intra-sexual vs. inter-sexual interaction) and varies according to the social context (e.g. gender, hierarchical or mating status of the audience). However, the way individuals might adapt their signalling behaviour to a combination of these factors remains poorly understood. To address this question, we studied how the presence of an audience affects the behaviour of male domestic canaries Serinus canaria during two types of interactions: (i) an extra-pair interaction and (ii) a male-male competition for food. Males were observed under three conditions: (a) in the absence of audience, (b) in the presence of their mate or (c) of a familiar female. Our results show that male domestic canaries minutely adapt their courting and agonistic behaviours to a combination of: (i) the type of interaction (extra-pair interaction/male-male competition), (ii) the social context (mate, familiar female or nobody in audience) and (iii) the behaviours of both the audience and the interactant. These results highlight the ability of animals to subtly adapt their behaviour to the social environment. This also raises questions about the cognitive foundations and evolution of these processes especially considering that canaries are known neither for having high cognitive abilities nor for being a typical example for the social intelligence hypothesis.

Highlights

  • Many animals live in a communication network: an environment where the distance between individuals is shorter than the range of communication signals [1]

  • This result confirms the existence of audience effects during an extra-pair interaction as seen in the budgerigars Melopsittacus undulatus [30]

  • The results could be different if similar experiments were conducted in polygynous species or in species where paternal cares do not exist: because of different selection pressures, males could either court more in the presence of an audience or could express no audience effects

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Summary

Introduction

Many animals live in a communication network: an environment where the distance between individuals is shorter than the range of communication signals [1]. Males of various species have been found to eavesdrop on male-male interactions and use the information gathered in subsequent encounters (e.g. nightingale, Luscinia megarhynchos [3,4]; fighting fish, Betta splendens [5]; great tit, Parus major [6]; domestic canary, Serinus canaria [7,8]). Females seem to evaluate potential sexual partners by eavesdropping both during the initial stages of mate choice (fighting fish [9]; Japanese quail, Coturnix japonica [10,11]; domestic canary [12,13]) and during extrapair attempts (great tit: [14]; black-capped chickadee, Poecile atricapilla [15]). The information obtained by eavesdropping can modify the fitness of individuals by influencing the agonistic behaviours an animal undergoes or its reproductive success

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