Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology, University of Wisconsin, Madison WI 53706, USA.
Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies, University of Wisconsin, Madison WI 53726, USA.
Proc Biol Sci. 2024 Nov;291(2034):20241908. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2024.1908. Epub 2024 Nov 6.
Animal communication plays a crucial role in biology, yet the wide variability in vocalizations is not fully understood. Previous studies in birds have been limited in taxonomic and analytical breadth. Here, we analyse an extensive dataset of >140 000 recordings of vocalizations from 8450 bird species, representing nearly every avian order and family, under a structural causal model framework, to explore the influence of eco-evolutionary traits on acoustic frequency characteristics. We find that body mass, beak size, habitat associations and geography influence acoustic frequency characteristics, with varying degrees of interaction with song acquisition type. We find no evidence for the influence of vegetation density, sexual dimorphism, range size and competition on our measures of acoustic frequency characteristics. Our results, built on decades of researchers' empirical observations collected across the globe, provide a new breadth of evidence about how eco-evolutionary processes shape bird communication.
动物通讯在生物学中起着至关重要的作用,但对其广泛的变异性仍不完全了解。以前对鸟类的研究在分类学和分析广度上受到限制。在这里,我们在结构因果模型框架下分析了一个包含超过 14 万条来自 8450 种鸟类的发声记录的大型数据集,这些鸟类代表了几乎每一个鸟类目和科,以探讨生态进化特征对声音频率特征的影响。我们发现,体重、鸟喙大小、栖息地联系和地理位置影响着声音频率特征,并且与歌唱习得类型存在不同程度的相互作用。我们没有发现植被密度、两性异形、分布范围大小和竞争对我们的声音频率特征衡量标准有影响的证据。我们的研究结果建立在全球几十年的研究人员的经验观察基础上,为生态进化过程如何塑造鸟类通讯提供了新的广泛证据。