Physics Department, Haverford College, Haverford, PA United States of America.
Department of Zoology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
PLoS One. 2018 Nov 28;13(11):e0207247. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0207247. eCollection 2018.
Feathers act as vibrotactile sensors that can detect mechanical stimuli during avian flight and tactile navigation, suggesting that they may also detect stimuli during social displays. In this study, we present the first measurements of the biomechanical properties of the feather crests found on the heads of birds, with an emphasis on those from the Indian peafowl (Pavo cristatus). We show that in peafowl these crest feathers are coupled to filoplumes, small feathers known to function as mechanosensors. We also determined that airborne stimuli with the frequencies used during peafowl courtship and social displays couple efficiently via resonance to the vibrational response of their feather crests. Specifically, vibrational measurements showed that although different types of feathers have a wide range of fundamental resonant frequencies, peafowl crests are driven near-optimally by the shaking frequencies used by peacocks performing train-rattling displays. Peafowl crests were also driven to vibrate near resonance in a playback experiment that mimicked the effect of these mechanical sounds in the acoustic very near-field, reproducing the way peafowl displays are experienced at distances ≤ 1.5m in vivo. When peacock wing-shaking courtship behaviour was simulated in the laboratory, the resulting airflow excited measurable vibrations of crest feathers. These results demonstrate that peafowl crests have mechanical properties that allow them to respond to airborne stimuli at the frequencies typical of this species' social displays. This suggests a new hypothesis that mechanosensory stimuli could complement acoustic and visual perception and/or proprioception of social displays in peafowl and other bird species. We suggest behavioral studies to explore these ideas and their functional implications.
羽毛充当着振动触觉传感器,在鸟类飞行和触觉导航过程中,可以探测机械刺激,这表明它们也可能在社交展示中探测刺激。在这项研究中,我们首次对鸟类头部羽毛羽冠的生物力学特性进行了测量,重点是印度孔雀(Pavo cristatus)的羽冠。我们发现,在孔雀中,这些羽冠羽与纤羽相连,纤羽是已知作为机械传感器发挥作用的小羽毛。我们还确定,在孔雀求偶和社交展示过程中使用的空气传播刺激通过共振与它们羽冠的振动响应有效地耦合。具体来说,振动测量表明,尽管不同类型的羽毛具有广泛的基频,但孔雀羽冠通过雄孔雀在表演摇尾展示时使用的晃动频率被近乎最佳地驱动。在模仿这些机械声音在近场声学中效果的播放实验中,孔雀羽冠也被驱动到接近共振的状态,再现了在活体 1.5 米以内观察到的孔雀展示的方式。当在实验室中模拟雄孔雀的翅膀晃动求偶行为时,产生的气流激发了羽冠可测量的振动。这些结果表明,孔雀羽冠具有机械特性,使其能够对社交展示中该物种典型的空气传播刺激做出反应。这提出了一个新的假设,即机械感觉刺激可以补充孔雀和其他鸟类社交展示的听觉和视觉感知和/或本体感觉。我们建议进行行为研究来探索这些想法及其功能意义。