Goodale Eben, Kotagama Sarath W
University of Massachusetts Organismic and Evolutionary Biology Amherst, MA 01003, USA.
Proc Biol Sci. 2006 Apr 7;273(1588):875-80. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2005.3392.
How do birds select the sounds they mimic, and in what contexts do they use vocal mimicry? Some birds show a preference for mimicking other species' alarm notes, especially in situations when they appear to be alarmed. Yet no study has demonstrated that birds change the call types they mimic with changing contexts. We found that greater racket-tailed drongos (Dicrurus paradiseus) in the rainforest of Sri Lanka mimic the calls of predators and the alarm-associated calls of other species more often than would be expected from the frequency of these sounds in the acoustic environment. Drongos include this alarm-associated mimicry in their own alarm vocalizations, while incorporating other species' songs and contact calls in their own songs. Drongos show an additional level of context specificity by mimicking other species' ground predator-specific call types when mobbing. We suggest that drongos learn other species' calls and their contexts while interacting with these species in mixed flocks. The drongos' behaviour demonstrates that alarm-associated calls can have learned components, and that birds can learn the appropriate usage of calls that encode different types of information.
鸟类如何选择它们模仿的声音,以及它们在什么情况下使用声音模仿?一些鸟类表现出对模仿其他物种警报声的偏好,尤其是在它们似乎受到惊吓的情况下。然而,尚无研究表明鸟类会随着环境变化而改变它们模仿的叫声类型。我们发现,斯里兰卡雨林中的大噪鹛(Dicrurus paradiseus)比根据声学环境中这些声音的出现频率所预期的更频繁地模仿捕食者的叫声以及其他物种与警报相关的叫声。大噪鹛在自己的警报叫声中融入了这种与警报相关的模仿,同时在自己的歌声中融入了其他物种的歌声和联络叫声。大噪鹛在驱赶时通过模仿其他物种特定于地面捕食者的叫声类型,展现出了额外的情境特异性。我们认为,大噪鹛在与混合鸟群中的其他物种互动时,学会了其他物种的叫声及其所处情境。大噪鹛的行为表明,与警报相关的叫声可能具有后天习得的成分,并且鸟类能够学会对编码不同类型信息的叫声的恰当使用。