Rossetto Federica, Cardoso Gonçalo C, Laiolo Paola
Biodiversity Research Institute (CSIC, Oviedo University, Principality of Asturias), Campus de Mieres, Edificio de Investigación - 5ª planta, C. Gonzalo Gutiérrez Quirós s/n, 33600, Mieres, Spain.
Pyrenean Institute of Ecology (IPE-CSIC), Avda. Montañana 1005, Campus de Aula Dei, 50059, Saragossa, Spain.
Learn Behav. 2025 Jun 2. doi: 10.3758/s13420-025-00678-z.
Eavesdropping on heterospecific alarm calls can provide valuable information about predator presence and therefore yield survival benefits. However, if, how, and why individuals react to heterospecific alarms is poorly known. If heterospecific alarms trigger a response, individuals might either stop their own vocal activity (acoustic suppression), to avoid being detected, or start alarming (acoustic stimulation), to warn conspecifics or deter predators. Here, we performed playback experiments with the alarms of 14 common forest passerine species and tested whether heterospecifics changed their acoustic behavior after playbacks and whether this involved suppression or stimulation. Moreover, we tested whether bird behavior was influenced by species-specific attributes such as escape capability, the propensity of being predated by raptors and carnivorous mammals, and the acoustic properties of alarms affecting detectability. Birds uttered alarms more frequently after playbacks than after silent controls, gave the same alarms as they normally use in response to conspecifics, and did not suppress their acoustic activity after playbacks. These results indicate that birds perceive threat from heterospecific alarms and are contagiously stimulated to alarm, rather than inhibited. Species with morphological attributes that promote agility and suffering low predation rates were more acoustically stimulated by heterospecific alarms, irrespective of the acoustic properties of the playback or their own alarms, indicating that the propensity to join into an alarm calling bout is mediated by predation risk. This study provides evidence for contagious alarming across species, for potential costs of responding to these stimuli, and shows a facilitative role of signalers within communities.
窃听异种警报叫声可以提供有关捕食者存在的宝贵信息,从而带来生存益处。然而,个体如何、为何以及是否会对异种警报做出反应却鲜为人知。如果异种警报引发反应,个体可能会停止自身的发声活动(声学抑制)以避免被发现,或者开始发出警报(声学刺激)以警告同种个体或威慑捕食者。在此,我们用14种常见森林鸣禽的警报声进行了回放实验,测试了异种个体在回放后是否改变其声学行为,以及这是否涉及抑制或刺激。此外,我们还测试了鸟类行为是否受到特定物种属性的影响,如逃脱能力、被猛禽和食肉哺乳动物捕食的倾向,以及影响可探测性的警报声声学特性。与静音对照相比,鸟类在回放后发出警报的频率更高,发出的警报与它们通常对同种个体做出反应时发出的相同,并且在回放后没有抑制其声学活动。这些结果表明,鸟类能从异种警报中感知到威胁,并受到感染性刺激而发出警报,而非受到抑制。具有促进敏捷性且被捕食率低的形态学特征的物种,无论回放声或其自身警报声的声学特性如何,都更容易受到异种警报的声学刺激,这表明参与警报鸣叫回合的倾向是由捕食风险介导的。本研究为跨物种的感染性警报、对这些刺激做出反应的潜在代价提供了证据,并显示了信号发出者在群落中的促进作用。