Tchernichovski O, Nottebohm F
The Rockefeller University, Field Research Center, Tyrrel Road, Millbrook, NY 12545, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1998 Jul 21;95(15):8951-6. doi: 10.1073/pnas.95.15.8951.
A male zebra finch, Taeniopygia guttata, kept with its father until adulthood develops an imitation of its father's song motif. We report here that the completeness of this imitation was sensitive to the social or auditory context in which the bird grew up: the greater the number of male siblings in a clutch, the shorter the mean duration of the song motif and the fewer the mean number of song notes imitated from the father; the latter shortfall was not compensated by other, improvised notes. We call this effect fraternal inhibition. Fraternal inhibition was avoided by members of a clutch that developed the song first. To our surprise, this role commonly fell to one of the younger birds in the clutch. Early song learning may influence fitness since individuals that produced the most complete imitations also tended to induce more egg laying.
一只雄性斑胸草雀,即斑胸草雀属的虎皮鹦鹉,一直与其父亲生活到成年,它会模仿父亲的歌曲主题。我们在此报告,这种模仿的完整性对鸟儿成长的社会或听觉环境很敏感:一窝中雄性兄弟姐妹数量越多,歌曲主题的平均时长就越短,从父亲那里模仿的歌曲音符平均数量就越少;后一种不足无法通过其他即兴音符来弥补。我们将这种效应称为兄弟抑制。一窝中最早学会唱歌的成员可避免兄弟抑制。令我们惊讶的是,这个角色通常由一窝中较年幼的一只鸟承担。早期的歌曲学习可能会影响适应性,因为模仿最完整的个体往往也能促使更多的产卵行为。