Animal alarm calls can contain detailed information about a predator's threat, and heterospecific eavesdropping on these signals creates vast communication networks. While eavesdropping is common, this indirect public information is often less reliable than direct predator observations. Red-breasted nuthatches (Sitta canadensis) eavesdrop on chickadee mobbing calls and vary their behaviour depending on the threat encoded in those calls. Whether nuthatches propagate this indirect information in their own calls remains unknown. Here we test whether nuthatches propagate direct (high and low threat raptor vocalizations) or indirect (high and low threat chickadee mobbing calls) information about predators differently. When receiving direct information, nuthatches vary their mobbing calls to reflect the predator's threat. However, when nuthatches obtain indirect information, they produce calls with intermediate acoustic features, suggesting a more generic alarm signal. This suggests nuthatches are sensitive to the source and reliability of information and selectively propagate information in their own mobbing calls.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-14414-w | DOI Listing |
PLoS One
November 2024
Faculté des Sciences, Laboratoire de Morphologie Fonctionnelle et Evolutive, Universiteé de Lieège, Lieège, Belgium.
The literature on sound production behaviours in fish in the wild is quite sparse. In several taxa, associations between different sound types and given behaviours have been reported. In the Holocentridae, past nomenclature of the different sound types (knocks, growls, grunts, staccatos and thumps) has been confusing because it relies on the use of several terms that are not always based on fine descriptions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiol Rev Camb Philos Soc
August 2024
Département d'Etudes Cognitives, LSCP (ENS-EHESS-CNRS), Ecole Normale Supérieure, PSL University, Paris, France.
It was argued in a series of experimental studies that Japanese tits (Parus minor) have an ABC call that has an alert function, a D call that has a recruitment function, and an ABC-D call that is compositionally derived from ABC and D, and has a mobbing function. A key conclusion was that ABC-D differs from the combination of separate utterances of ABC and of D (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZoolog Sci
August 2023
Department of Zoology, University of Córdoba, Campus Universitario de Rabanales (Edificio C-1), Carretera Nacional IV, 14071 Córdoba, Spain.
While mobbing, individuals utter distinctive calls and perform visual threatening displays. Like any other antipredatory strategies, it involves some costs (time, energy, injuries, and even death). Therefore, mobbing would be expected to vary depending on the perceived magnitude of the predation risk.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFR Soc Open Sci
May 2023
Department of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies, University of Zurich, Zurich 8057, Switzerland.
Audio playbacks are a common experimental tool in vocal communication research. However, low directionality of sound makes it hard to control the audience exposed to the stimuli. Parametric speakers offer a solution for transmitting directional audible signals by using ultrasonic carrier waves.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiol Rev Camb Philos Soc
August 2023
PSL Research University, 60 Rue Mazarine, Paris, 75006, France.
In several animal species, an alarm call (e.g. ABC notes in the Japanese tit Parus minor) can be immediately followed by a recruitment call (e.
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