Snijders Lysanne, van der Eijk Jerine, van Rooij Erica P, de Goede Piet, van Oers Kees, Naguib Marc
Behavioural Ecology Group, Wageningen University, Wageningen, The Netherlands; Department of Animal Ecology, Netherlands Institute of Ecology NIOO-KNAW, Wageningen, The Netherlands.
Behavioural Ecology Group, Wageningen University, Wageningen, The Netherlands.
PLoS One. 2015 Feb 18;10(2):e0116881. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0116881. eCollection 2015.
For many animals, long-range signalling is essential to maintain contact with conspecifics. In territorial species, individuals often have to balance signalling towards unfamiliar potential competitors (to solely broadcast territory ownership) with signalling towards familiar immediate neighbours (to also maintain so-called "dear enemy" relations). Hence, to understand how signals evolve due to these multilevel relationships, it is important to understand how general signal traits vary in relation to the overall social environment. For many territorial songbirds dawn is a key signalling period, with several neighbouring individuals singing simultaneously without immediate conflict. In this study we tested whether sharing a territory boundary, rather than spatial proximity, is related to similarity in dawn song traits between territorial great tits (Parus major) in a wild personality-typed population. We collected a large dataset of automatized dawn song recordings from 72 unique male great tits, during the fertile period of their mate, and compared specific song traits between neighbours and non-neighbours. We show here that both song rate and start time of dawn song were repeatable song traits. Moreover, neighbours were significantly more dissimilar in song rate compared to non-neighbours, while there was no effect of proximity on song rate similarity. Additionally, similarity in start time of dawn song was unrelated to sharing a territory boundary, but birds were significantly more similar in start time of dawn song when they were breeding in close proximity of each other. We suggest that the dissimilarity in dawn song rate between neighbours is either the result of neighbouring great tits actively avoiding similar song rates to possibly prevent interference, or a passive consequence of territory settlement preferences relative to the types of neighbours. Neighbourhood structuring is therefore likely to be a relevant selection pressure shaping variation in territorial birdsong.
对于许多动物来说,远距离信号传递对于与同种个体保持联系至关重要。在具有领地意识的物种中,个体往往需要在向陌生潜在竞争者发出信号(仅用于宣告领地所有权)和向熟悉的近邻发出信号(以维持所谓的“亲密敌人”关系)之间取得平衡。因此,为了理解信号如何因这些多层次关系而进化,了解一般信号特征如何随整体社会环境而变化很重要。对于许多有领地意识的鸣禽来说,黎明是关键的信号传递时期,几个相邻个体同时歌唱而不会立即发生冲突。在本研究中,我们测试了在一个具有个性类型的野生种群中,共享领地边界而非空间 proximity,是否与领地大山雀(Parus major)黎明歌声特征的相似性有关。我们在其配偶的繁殖期收集了来自72只独特雄性大山雀的大量自动化黎明歌声录音数据集,并比较了邻居和非邻居之间的特定歌声特征。我们在此表明,歌声速率和黎明歌声的开始时间都是可重复的歌声特征。此外,与非邻居相比,邻居在歌声速率上的差异显著更大,而 proximity 对歌声速率相似性没有影响。此外,黎明歌声开始时间的相似性与共享领地边界无关,但当鸟类彼此近距离繁殖时,它们在黎明歌声开始时间上显著更相似。我们认为,邻居之间黎明歌声速率的差异要么是相邻大山雀主动避免相似歌声速率以可能防止干扰的结果,要么是相对于邻居类型的领地定居偏好的被动结果。因此,邻里结构可能是塑造领地鸟鸣变化的一个相关选择压力。