Abstract

The two-note call of the male common cuckoo (Cuculus canorus), the so-called “cu-coo”, is well known to people as a natural and cultural signal. However, the so-called “bubbling” call of the female cuckoo is almost unknown to most, and its function in the social organization of cuckoos remains understudied. We carried out a study of a possible intraspecific communication function of female bubbling calls, using playbacks to female cuckoos in their natural environment. Regarding vocal responses, both female and male cuckoos paid attention to the bubbling calls as they consistently responded acoustically by calling but did not so during control playbacks of collared dove (Streptopelia decaocto) calls. Accordingly, in about 63% of trials, females approached the loudspeaker closely and 81% uttered bubbling calls themselves during the experiment. These results are consistent with a function that the bubbling call plays a role in territorial signaling and defense among females. Male cuckoos also showed strong responses to playbacks of bubbling calls, as they approached the speaker and themselves called in 94% of playbacks; this is consistent with a scenario that they are interested in unfamiliar, new females in the area. Specifically, males approached the speaker repeatedly by flight, often flew around it and then perched on a tree, and uttered different call types beside the general “cu-coo” (e.g., quick “cu-cu-coo”, “gowk” call, and “guo” call). Our results represent an illustrative example that a simple female call may have multiple functions, as the cuckoo bubbling call advertises territory need for female cuckoos and attracts males.Significance statement Avian brood parasites lay their eggs in nests of other bird species, causing hosts to incubate, feed, and rear the parasitic offspring. Parasitic adult common cuckoos maintain a complex acoustic communication system, but female cuckoo calls are only beginning to be studied. The basic intraspecific functions of females’ sparrowhawk-like “bubbling calls” have not yet been characterized, whereas interspecifically, they use it for reducing antiparasitic attacks by their hosts. Our playback experiments with bubbling calls revealed that both female and male cuckoos responded acoustically to unfamiliar bubbling calls and more males than females approached the speaker, relative to control playbacks. We conclude that bubbling call has dual basic intraspecific functions: mate attraction, and territorial spacing.

Highlights

  • Acoustic communication plays a role in the social communication systems of many arthropod and vertebrate species (Bradbury and Vehrencamp 1998; Ladich and Winkler 2017), including birds, as well as in male-male, female-female, and intersexual relationships (Catchpole and Slater 2008)

  • As our experiments started at trial sites where a female cuckoo was observed to utter the bubbling call, the cumulative numbers of females in bubbling and dove control trials represent these cases. (In other words, at least one female at each trial was present already and not initially attracted by the playback.) The number of female cuckoos counted was almost the Cuckoo response behaviors were analyzed by principal component analysis (PCA), using the SPSS ver. 17 programs package (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, USA)

  • Each PCA was started from the correlation matrix, and the number of components was determined by eigenvalues greater than 1.0, while taking into account the cumulative variance explained

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Summary

Introduction

Acoustic communication plays a role in the social communication systems of many arthropod and vertebrate species (Bradbury and Vehrencamp 1998; Ladich and Winkler 2017), including birds, as well as in male-male, female-female, and intersexual relationships (Catchpole and Slater 2008). In obligate brood parasitic birds, such roles of territory defense may have less importance as females lay their eggs in the nests of other species. Female brood parasites may defend their nest-searching and egg-laying areas from conspecifics so as to monopolize access to this critical resource for breeding (Hauber and Dearborn 2003). Females of the brown-headed cowbird (Molothrus ater) and the common cuckoo (Cuculus canorus) may locate, guard, and protect their host nests from conspecifics and may have separate egg-laying territories (Gärtner 1981; Wyllie 1981; Dröscher 1988; Hauber et al 2001; Honza et al 2002; Davies 2015; but see Vogl et al 2004)

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