Institute of Evolutionary Biology, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH9 3JT, UK.
Biol Lett. 2010 Oct 23;6(5):626-9. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2010.0093. Epub 2010 Mar 17.
Vocal mimicry is one of the more striking aspects of avian vocalization and is widespread across songbirds. However, little is known about how mimics acquire heterospecific and environmental sounds. We investigated geographical and individual variation in the mimetic repertoires of males of a proficient mimic, the spotted bowerbird Ptilonorhynchus maculatus. Male bower owners shared more of their mimetic repertoires with neighbouring bower owners than with more distant males. However, interbower distance did not explain variation in the highly repeatable renditions given by bower owners of two commonly mimicked species. From the similarity between model and mimic vocalizations and the patterns of repertoire sharing among males, we suggest that the bowerbirds are learning their mimetic repertoire from heterospecifics and not from each other.
鸣禽的叫声以其拟声能力而著称,这种现象在鸣禽中非常普遍。然而,人们对鸣禽如何获得异源种和环境声音知之甚少。我们研究了一种熟练模仿者——斑点园丁鸟(Ptilonorhynchus maculatus)雄性个体的地理和个体变异,以及它们模仿能力的变化。与更远距离的雄性个体相比,雄性园丁鸟与附近的园丁鸟拥有者共享更多的模仿能力。然而,在两种常见的被模仿物种中,雄鸟之间的鸣叫声相似度非常高,而鸣禽领域之间的距离并不能解释这种相似度的变化。从模型和模仿声音的相似性以及雄性之间的曲目共享模式来看,我们认为园丁鸟是从异源种而不是从彼此那里学习它们的模仿曲目。