Kinematic control of male Allen's hummingbird wing trill over a range of flight speeds.

J Exp Biol

Department of Evolution, Ecology and Organismal Biology, University of California Riverside, CA 92521, USA.

Published: July 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • Wing trills are specific sounds made by male Allen's hummingbirds using their wing feathers, producing a distinctive 9 kHz sound during flight.
  • The study tested two hypotheses about how these trills are produced: one suggests it's related to wingtip speed, while the other focuses on wing rotation dynamics.
  • Results showed that trill volume varies with flight speed, peaking during maneuvers, and support the wing rotation hypothesis, indicating that wing movements may help males adjust their trills during courtship displays.

Article Abstract

Wing trills are pulsed sounds produced by modified wing feathers at one or more specific points in time during a wingbeat. Male Allen's hummingbirds () produce a sexually dimorphic 9 kHz wing trill in flight. Here, we investigated the kinematic basis for trill production. The wingtip velocity hypothesis posits that trill production is modulated by the airspeed of the wingtip at some point during the wingbeat, whereas the wing rotation hypothesis posits that trill production is instead modulated by wing rotation kinematics. To test these hypotheses, we flew six male Allen's hummingbirds in an open-jet wind tunnel at flight speeds of 0, 3, 6, 9, 12 and 14 m s, and recorded their flight with two 'acoustic cameras' placed below and behind, or below and lateral to the flying bird. The acoustic cameras are phased arrays of 40 microphones that used beamforming to spatially locate sound sources within a camera image. Trill sound pressure level (SPL) exhibited a U-shaped relationship with flight speed in all three camera positions. SPL was greatest perpendicular to the stroke plane. Acoustic camera videos suggest that the trill is produced during supination. The trill was up to 20 dB louder during maneuvers than it was during steady-state flight in the wind tunnel, across all airspeeds tested. These data provide partial support for the wing rotation hypothesis. Altered wing rotation kinematics could allow male Allen's hummingbirds to modulate trill production in social contexts such as courtship displays.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/jeb.173625DOI Listing

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