Aubin T, Jouventin P, Hildebrand C
NAM, Laboratoire des Mécanismes de la Communication, URA 1491 du CNRS, Université Paris XI, Oray, France.
Proc Biol Sci. 2000 Jun 7;267(1448):1081-7. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2000.1112.
The sound-producing structure in birds is the syrinx, which is usually a two-part organ located at the junction of the bronchi. As each branch of the syrinx produces sound independently, many birds have two acoustic sources. Thirty years ago, we had anatomical, physiological and acoustical evidence of this two-voice phenomenon but no function was known. In songbirds, often these two voices with their respective harmonics are not activated simultaneously but they are obvious in large penguins and generate a beat pattern which varies between individuals. The emperor penguin breeds during the Antarctic winter, incubating and carrying its egg on its feet. Without the topographical cue of a nest, birds identify each other only by vocal means when switching duties during incubation or chick rearing. To test whether the two-voice system contains the identity code, we played back the modified call of their mate to both adults and also the modified call of their parents to chicks. Both the adults and the chicks replied to controls (two voices) but not to modified signals (one voice being experimentally suppressed). Our experiments demonstrate that the beat generated by the interaction of these two fundamental frequencies conveys information about individual identity and also propagates well through obstacles, being robust to sound degradation through the medium of bodies in a penguin colony. The two-voice structure is also clear in the call of other birds such as the king penguin, another non-nesting species, but not in the 14 other nesting penguins. We concluded that the two-voice phenomenon functions as an individual recognition system in species using few if any landmarks to meet. In penguins, this coding process, increasing the call complexity and resisting sound degradation, has evolved in parallel with the loss of territoriality.
鸟类的发声结构是鸣管,它通常是一个位于支气管交汇处的由两部分组成的器官。由于鸣管的每个分支都能独立发声,许多鸟类有两个声源。30年前,我们有关于这种双声现象的解剖学、生理学和声学证据,但当时还不知道其功能。在鸣禽中,这两种声音及其各自的谐波通常不会同时被激活,但在大型企鹅中很明显,并且会产生个体间不同的拍频模式。帝企鹅在南极冬季繁殖,用脚孵化并携带企鹅蛋。由于没有巢穴的地形线索,鸟类在孵化或育雏期间轮流承担任务时,只能通过声音来识别彼此。为了测试双声系统是否包含身份代码,我们向成年企鹅播放其配偶的修改后的叫声,也向雏鸟播放其父母的修改后的叫声。成年企鹅和雏鸟都对对照声音(双声)做出反应,但对修改后的信号(其中一个声音被实验性抑制)没有反应。我们的实验表明,这两个基频相互作用产生的拍频传达了个体身份信息,并且能够很好地穿透障碍物传播,在企鹅群体中,即使声音通过身体传播而衰减,这种信息也能保持稳定。双声结构在其他鸟类如王企鹅(另一种不筑巢的物种)的叫声中也很明显,但在其他14种筑巢企鹅中则不明显。我们得出结论,双声现象在很少有或几乎没有地标可用于相遇的物种中起着个体识别系统的作用。在企鹅中,这种编码过程增加了叫声的复杂性并抵抗声音衰减,它与领地性的丧失是并行进化的。