Bai Jin, Freeberg Todd M, Lucas Jeffrey R, Sieving Kathryn E
Department of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation University of Florida Gainesville FL USA.
Department of Psychology University of Tennessee - Knoxville Knoxville TN USA.
Ecol Evol. 2021 Apr 3;11(10):5305-5319. doi: 10.1002/ece3.7421. eCollection 2021 May.
Territorial aggression in birds is widely observed and is commonly linked to sex, age, body size, physiology, seasonal cues, food resource, urbanization, and a variety of social contexts including conspecific audience effects. However, little is known about the heterospecific audience effects on territorial aggression.Here, we address an emerging idea that heterospecific audience effects may be pervasive influences in the social lives of free-living birds. We tested the hypothesis that the composition, number, and relative body size of heterospecific audiences observing an aggressive contest will influence the response probability and intensity of aggression displayed.We subjected two Paridae species, tufted titmouse (TUTI, ) and Carolina chickadee (CACH, ), to playbacks of aggressive calls during a breeding season in north-central Florida. At widely spaced playback sites ( = 134) in woodland habitats, we characterized the makeup of heterospecific audiences, aggression type (intra vs. interspecific territoriality), local population density, and various environmental factors (tree density, wind speed, and noise level) that are likely to influence territorial aggression.We found that the presence of heterospecific audiences increased TUTI aggression levels and that both parids were more likely to respond to playback stimuli when their audiences had higher heterospecific diversity (more heterospecific individuals and species). We also found TUTI were more likely to respond when CACH were present but not vice versa.In conclusion, we found evidence that heterospecific audiences significantly influenced the metrics of territorial aggression of free-living animals and we suggest that the definition of audience effects on the behavior of free-living animals be expanded to incorporate heterospecific audiences.
鸟类的领地攻击性广泛存在,通常与性别、年龄、体型、生理状态、季节线索、食物资源、城市化以及包括同种观众效应在内的各种社会背景有关。然而,关于异种观众对领地攻击性的影响却知之甚少。在此,我们探讨一个新出现的观点,即异种观众效应可能是自由生活鸟类社会生活中普遍存在的影响因素。我们检验了这样一个假设:观察攻击性竞争的异种观众的组成、数量和相对体型会影响所表现出的攻击反应概率和强度。在佛罗里达州中北部的繁殖季节,我们让两种山雀科鸟类,簇山雀(TUTI)和卡罗来纳山雀(CACH),听攻击性叫声的回放。在林地栖息地中分布广泛的回放点( = 134),我们对异种观众的构成、攻击类型(种内与种间领地性)、当地种群密度以及可能影响领地攻击性的各种环境因素(树木密度、风速和噪音水平)进行了特征描述。我们发现,异种观众的存在提高了簇山雀的攻击水平,并且当观众具有更高的异种多样性(更多的异种个体和物种)时,两种山雀对回放刺激做出反应的可能性更大。我们还发现,当卡罗来纳山雀在场时,簇山雀更有可能做出反应,反之则不然。总之,我们发现有证据表明异种观众显著影响了自由生活动物领地攻击的指标,并且我们建议将观众对自由生活动物行为的影响定义进行扩展,以纳入异种观众。