Ratnayake Chaminda P, Goodale Eben, Kotagama Sarath W
Field Ornithology Group of Sri Lanka, Department of Zoology, Faculty of Science, University of Colombo, Colombo, 3, Sri Lanka,
Naturwissenschaften. 2010 Jan;97(1):103-8. doi: 10.1007/s00114-009-0617-7. Epub 2009 Nov 25.
While some avian mimics appear to select sounds randomly, other species preferentially imitate sounds such as predator calls that are associated with danger. Previous work has shown that the Greater Racket-tailed Drongo (Dicrurus paradiseus) incorporates predator calls and heterospecific alarm calls into its own species-typical alarm vocalizations. Here, we show that another passerine species, the Sri Lanka Magpie (Urocissa ornata), which inhabits the same Sri Lankan rainforest, imitates three of the same predator calls that drongos do. For two of these call types, there is evidence that magpies also use them in alarm contexts. Our results support the hypothesis that imitated predator calls can serve as signals of alarm to multiple species.
虽然一些鸟类模仿者似乎是随机选择声音,但其他物种则优先模仿与危险相关的声音,如捕食者的叫声。先前的研究表明,大盘尾燕卷尾(Dicrurus paradiseus)会将捕食者的叫声和其他物种的警报声融入其自身典型的物种警报叫声中。在这里,我们表明,另一种栖息在同一斯里兰卡雨林中的雀形目物种——斯里兰卡蓝鹊(Urocissa ornata),模仿了燕卷尾所模仿的三种相同的捕食者叫声。对于其中两种叫声类型,有证据表明蓝鹊也在警报情境中使用它们。我们的结果支持了这样一种假设,即模仿的捕食者叫声可以作为对多个物种的警报信号。