Abstract

Music and dance are two remarkable human characteristics that are closely related. Communication through integrated vocal and motional signals is also common in the courtship displays of birds. The contribution of songbird studies to our understanding of vocal learning has already shed some light on the cognitive underpinnings of musical ability. Moreover, recent pioneering research has begun to show how animals can synchronize their behaviors with external stimuli, like metronome beats. However, few studies have applied such perspectives to unraveling how animals can integrate multimodal communicative signals that have natural functions. Additionally, studies have rarely asked how well these behaviors are learned. With this in mind, here we cast a spotlight on an unusual animal behavior: non-vocal sound production associated with singing in the Java sparrow (Lonchura oryzivora), a songbird. We show that male Java sparrows coordinate their bill-click sounds with the syntax of their song-note sequences, similar to percussionists. Analysis showed that they produced clicks frequently toward the beginning of songs and before/after specific song notes. We also show that bill-clicking patterns are similar between social fathers and their sons, suggesting that these behaviors might be learned from models or linked to learning-based vocalizations. Individuals untutored by conspecifics also exhibited stereotypical bill-clicking patterns in relation to song-note sequence, indicating that while the production of bill clicking itself is intrinsic, its syncopation appears to develop with songs. This paints an intriguing picture in which non-vocal sounds are integrated with vocal courtship signals in a songbird, a model that we expect will contribute to the further understanding of multimodal communication.

Highlights

  • Investigating how animals coordinate their movements with the sounds they produce holds the key to understanding the evolution of communicative and musical cognitive abilities.PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0124876 May 20, 2015Songbird as a PercussionistResearch into the coordination of movement with sound is topical, and shows that some species other than humans can spontaneously synchronize their movements with musical rhythms to which they are exposed [1,2,3,4,5]

  • This study reports the novel finding that the bill-click sound produced by male Java sparrows is coordinated and potentially learned with its song

  • We showed that male sparrows that were not tutored by conspecifics sang with bill clicks, indicating that the bill-click behavior itself is intrinsic and not learned

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Summary

Introduction

Investigating how animals coordinate their movements with the sounds they produce holds the key to understanding the evolution of communicative and musical cognitive abilities.PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0124876 May 20, 2015Songbird as a PercussionistResearch into the coordination of movement with sound is topical, and shows that some species other than humans can spontaneously synchronize their movements with musical rhythms to which they are exposed [1,2,3,4,5]. Male superb lyrebirds (Menura novaehollandiae) coordinate their dance repertoires with different song types [8], while in the zebra finch (Taeniopygia guttata) the relationship between dance movement and song elements exists but is not obligate [9]. To show both mechanistic and functional aspects of such coordination in avian courtship displays, considering the degree to which the combinations of vocal and gestural elements are conserved among individuals within a species is worthwhile. Williams [9] reported that father/son pairs of the zebra finch exhibited similar patterns of coordinated dance and song element sequences, suggesting that the choreography is socially learned (though the sample size was very small and genetic inheritance could not be excluded as an alternative explanation)

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