Abstract

In most songbirds, both sexes produce calls, or short vocalizations used to coordinate behaviors and maintain social cohesion. In contrast, songs are longer, more elaborate vocalizations typically only produced by males in behavioral contexts shaped by sexual selection operating through female choice. However, both males and females sing in many cooperatively breeding species, including the superb starling (Lamprotornis superbus). In this species, both sexes produce songs and calls composed of sequences of temporally discrete elements called motifs. Calls signal social group and individual identity, but the function of songs is currently unknown. Because superb starlings often sing in groups, song could be used not only in a sexual context, but also to signal identity and rank within the separate dominance hierarchies observed in males and females. To determine whether songs are used in mate attraction (sexually selected) and/or to influence social rank (socially selected), we compared song diversity with three potential indicators of fitness and dominance: social status, the number of seasons spent breeding, and age. We found that age is correlated with song diversity in both males and females, suggesting that (1) these signals serve similar purposes in both sexes, and (2) song diversity is likely the result of selection by both mutual mate choice and social competition. To test whether songs carry a signal of individuality, we applied spectrogram dynamic time warping to measure pairwise similarity among song motifs, and then calculated motif similarity within and between individuals. We found that motif similarity is higher within individuals than between individuals, suggesting that songs signal individual identity, which may help to establish social rank. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that superb starling vocal behavior in each sex is shaped by both social and sexual selection. Additionally, because call motifs are also used in songs, our data suggest that at least some vocal building blocks have evolved to convey multiple signaler traits and to facilitate complex social and sexual interactions in different contexts.

Highlights

  • Bird song has traditionally been viewed either as a male ornament used to attract females or an armament used to defend territories against other males (Darwin, 1859)

  • Song diversity increased with age (LMM: t = 2.37, p = 0.028; Figure 2A), but decreased with the proportion of seasons spent breeding (t = −2.49, p = 0.021)

  • Our results show that older birds sing more diverse songs, consistent with the hypothesis that song complexity is a signal of current status within superb starling social groups

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Summary

Introduction

Bird song has traditionally been viewed either as a male ornament used to attract females or an armament used to defend territories against other males (Darwin, 1859). Under the traditional model of sexual selection (Darwin, 1871), song was thought to be an example of male trait elaboration resulting from differential selection pressures between the sexes due to female choice (Andersson, 1994). In species where competition among females is high, it has recently been suggested that elaborate female traits are under sexual selection much in the same way as they are in males: acting through male mate choice and femalefemale competition (Clutton-Brock, 2007, 2009; Rubenstein and Lovette, 2009; Rubenstein, 2012b). There has been a renewed interest in female ornamentation and the recognition that we must develop models of selection that account for this mutual trait elaboration (Clutton-Brock, 2007; Tobias et al, 2011; Rubenstein, 2012a), and reframe sexual selection theory to be more universally applicable to trait elaboration in both sexes (Jones and Ratterman, 2009; Price, 2015)

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