Natural Resources and Environmental Studies, University of Northern British Columbia, Prince George, BC V2N 4Z9, Canada.
Natural Resources and Environmental Studies, University of Northern British Columbia, Prince George, BC V2N 4Z9, Canada.
Curr Biol. 2020 Aug 17;30(16):3231-3235.e3. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2020.05.084. Epub 2020 Jul 2.
Hypotheses on regional song variation ("dialects") assume that dialects remain stable within regions, are distinct between regions, and persist within populations over extensive periods [1-3]. Theories to explain dialects focus on mechanisms that promote persistence of regional song variants despite gene flow between regions [4-6], such as juveniles settling in non-natal populations retaining only those songs from their repertoires that match neighbors [7, 8]. It would be considered atypical for a novel song variant to invade and replace the established regional variant. Yet some studies have reported song variants shifting rapidly over time within populations [9-11]. White-throated sparrows, Zonotrichia albicolis, for example, traditionally sing a whistled song terminating in a repeated triplet of notes [12], which was the ubiquitous variant in surveys across Canada in the 1960s [13]. However, doublet-ending songs emerged and replaced triplet-ending songs west of the Rocky Mountains sometime between 1960 and 2000 [11] and appeared just east of the Rockies in the 2000s [14]. From recordings collected over two decades across North America, we show that doublet-ending song has now spread at a continental scale. Using geolocator tracking, we confirm that birds from western Canada, where doublet-ending songs originated, overwinter with birds from central Canada, where the song initially spread. This suggests a potential mechanism for spread through song tutoring on wintering grounds. Where the new song variant has spread, it rose from a rare variant to the sole, regional song type, as predicted by the indirect biased transmission hypothesis [10]. VIDEO ABSTRACT.
有关区域歌曲变异(“方言”)的假说假设方言在区域内保持稳定,在区域之间具有明显区别,并且在大量时间内在种群内持续存在[1-3]。解释方言的理论侧重于促进区域歌曲变体持续存在的机制,尽管区域之间存在基因流动[4-6],例如,在非出生地定居的青少年只保留与其邻居匹配的曲目歌曲[7,8]。一种新的歌曲变体入侵并取代既定的区域变体被认为是不典型的。然而,一些研究报告称,在种群内,歌曲变体随时间迅速变化[9-11]。例如,白喉雀,Zonotrichia albicolis,传统上唱着以重复三连音符结束的口哨歌曲[12],这是 20 世纪 60 年代在加拿大各地调查中普遍存在的变体[13]。然而,双结尾歌曲在 20 世纪 60 年代至 2000 年之间在落基山脉以西出现并取代了三结尾歌曲[11],并且在 2000 年代出现在落基山脉以东[14]。从在北美收集的二十年的录音中,我们表明双结尾歌曲现在已经在大陆范围内传播。通过地理定位跟踪,我们证实了来自双结尾歌曲起源地加拿大西部的鸟类在加拿大中部越冬,在那里歌曲最初传播。这表明在越冬地通过歌曲辅导传播的潜在机制。在新歌曲变体传播的地方,它从罕见的变体上升为唯一的区域歌曲类型,正如间接偏向传递假说[10]所预测的那样。