Abstract

The study of vocal production learning in birds is heavily biased towards oscine songbirds, making the songbird model the reference for comparative studies. However, as vocal learning was probably ancestral in songbirds, interspecific variations might all be variations on a single theme and need not be representative of the nature and characteristics of vocal learning in other bird groups. To assess the possible mechanisms of vocal learning and its evolution therefore requires knowledge about independently evolved incidences of vocal learning. This review examines the presence and nature of vocal production learning in non-songbirds. Using a broad definition of vocal learning and a comparative phylogenetic framework, I evaluate the evidence for vocal learning and its characteristics in non-oscine birds, including well-known vocal learners such as parrots and hummingbirds but also (putative) cases from other taxa. Despite the sometimes limited evidence, it is clear that vocal learning occurs in a range of different, non-related, taxa and can be caused by a variety of mechanisms. It is more widespread than often realized, calling for more systematic studies. Examining this variation may provide a window onto the evolution of vocal learning and increase the value of comparative research for understanding vocal learning in humans.This article is part of the theme issue ‘Vocal learning in animals and humans’.

Highlights

  • Learning to produce particular sounds, i.e. vocal production learning, is a crucial feature for the development of human language

  • With respect to the distribution of vocal learning, convincing evidence for some type of vocal modification is present for species belonging to several avian orders—apart from oscine songbirds, parrots and hummingbirds these are suboscines, cuckoos, a gull, a duck and a loon

  • The various examples of vocal learning are scattered over the avian phylogenetic tree, including one of its earliest diverging branches: the waterfowl. This suggests a widespread potential for the evolution of some form of vocal learning

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Summary

Carel ten Cate

As vocal learning was probably ancestral in songbirds, interspecific variations might all be variations on a single theme and need not be representative of the nature and characteristics of vocal learning in other bird groups. Despite the sometimes limited evidence, it is clear that vocal learning occurs in a range of different, non-related, taxa and can be caused by a variety of mechanisms. It is more widespread than often realized, calling for more systematic studies. Examining this variation may provide a window onto the evolution of vocal learning and increase the value of comparative research for understanding vocal learning in humans.

Introduction
Strigopidae kakapo
Discussion
Clamator glandarius nestlings in nests of its two
Microgeographical variation in song repertoire
Rudimentary substrates for vocal learning in a
Full Text
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