LaZerte Stefanie E, Slabbekoorn Hans, Otter Ken A
Natural Resources and Environmental Studies, University of Northern British Columbia, Prince George, British Columbia, Canada.
Behavioural Biology, Institute of Biology, Leiden University, Leiden, Netherlands.
PeerJ. 2017 Apr 27;5:e3257. doi: 10.7717/peerj.3257. eCollection 2017.
Low-frequency urban noise can interfere with avian communication through masking. Some species are able to shift the frequency of their vocalizations upwards in noisy conditions, which may reduce the effects of masking. However, results from playback studies investigating whether or not such vocal changes improve audibility in noisy conditions are not clear; the responses of free-ranging individuals to shifted signals are potentially confounded by functional trade-offs between masking-related audibility and frequency-dependent signal quality. Black-capped chickadees () naturally sing their songs at several different frequencies as they pitch-shift to match conspecifics during song-matching contests. They are also known to switch to higher song frequencies in response to experimental noise exposure. Each male produces both high- and low-frequency songs and absolute frequency is not a signal of aggression or dominance, making this an interesting species in which to test whether higher-frequency songs are more audible than lower-frequency songs in noisy conditions. We conducted playback studies across southern and central British Columbia, Canada, using paired song stimuli (high- vs low-frequency songs, = 24 pairs) embedded in synthetic background noise created to match typical urban sound profiles. Over the course of each playback, the signal-to-noise ratio of the song stimuli was gradually increased by raising the amplitude of the song stimuli while maintaining background noise at a constant amplitude. We evaluated variation in how quickly and aggressively territorial males reacted to each of the paired stimuli. We found that males responded more quickly to playbacks of high- than low-frequency songs when high-frequency songs were presented first, but not when low-frequency songs were first. This difference may be explained by high-frequency songs being more audible combined with a carry-over effect resulting in slower responses to the second stimulus due to habituation. We observed no difference in overall aggression between stimuli. These results suggest that high-frequency songs may be more audible under noisy conditions.
低频城市噪音会通过掩蔽干扰鸟类的交流。一些物种能够在嘈杂环境中将其发声频率向上转移,这可能会降低掩蔽的影响。然而,关于这种发声变化是否能改善嘈杂环境中可听度的回放研究结果并不明确;自由活动个体对频率转移信号的反应可能会被掩蔽相关可听度和频率依赖信号质量之间的功能权衡所混淆。黑头山雀()在歌曲匹配竞赛中为了与同种个体音高匹配,会自然地以几种不同频率唱歌。它们也已知会因实验性噪音暴露而切换到更高的歌曲频率。每只雄性都会发出高频和低频歌曲,且绝对频率并非攻击或主导地位的信号,这使得该物种成为测试在嘈杂环境中高频歌曲是否比低频歌曲更易被听到的有趣物种。我们在加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省南部和中部进行了回放研究,使用嵌入合成背景噪音中的成对歌曲刺激(高频与低频歌曲,= 24对),该合成背景噪音的创建是为了匹配典型的城市声音特征。在每次回放过程中,通过提高歌曲刺激的幅度同时保持背景噪音幅度不变,逐渐增加歌曲刺激的信噪比。我们评估了具有领地意识的雄性对每对刺激做出反应的速度和攻击性的变化。我们发现,当首先播放高频歌曲时,雄性对高频歌曲回放的反应比对低频歌曲的反应更快,但当首先播放低频歌曲时则不然。这种差异可能是由于高频歌曲更易被听到,再加上一种遗留效应,即由于习惯化导致对第二个刺激的反应变慢。我们观察到不同刺激之间在总体攻击性上没有差异。这些结果表明,在嘈杂条件下高频歌曲可能更易被听到。