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Vocal individuality in drumming in great spotted woodpecker—A biological perspective and implications for conservation

机译:斑啄木鸟击鼓的声乐个性—生物学观点及其对保护的启示

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摘要

Animals—including conservation biologists—use acoustic signals to recognise and track individuals. The majority of research on this phenomenon has focused on sounds generated by vocal organs (e.g., larynx or syrinx). However, animals also produce sounds using other parts of the body, such as the wings, tail, legs, or bill. In this study we focused on non-syrinx vocalisation of the great spotted woodpecker, called drumming. Drumming consists of strokes of a bill on a tree in short, repeated series, and is performed by both males and females to attract mates and deter rivals. Here, we considered whether the great spotted woodpecker’s drumming patterns are sex-specific and whether they enable individual identification. We recorded drumming of 41 great spotted woodpeckers (26 males, 9 females, 6 unsexed). An automatic method was used to measure the intervals between succeeding strokes and to count strokes within a drumming roll. The temporal parameters of drumming that were analysed here had lower within- than between-individual coefficients of variation. Discriminant function analyses correctly assigned 70–88% of rolls to the originating individual, but this depended on whether all individuals were analysed together or split into males and females. We found slight, but significant, differences between males and females in the length of intervals between strokes—males drummed faster than females—but no difference in the number of strokes within a roll. Our study revealed that temporal patterns of drumming in the great spotted woodpecker cannot be used for unambiguous sex determination. Instead, discrimination among individuals may be possible based on the intervals between strokes and the number of strokes within a roll. Therefore, it is possible that differences in the temporal parameters of drumming may be used by birds to identify each other, as well as by researchers to aid in census and monitoring tasks.
机译:动物(包括保护生物学家)使用声音信号来识别和跟踪个体。关于这种现象的大多数研究都集中在声器官产生的声音上(例如,喉或syrinx)。但是,动物也会利用身体的其他部位发出声音,例如翅膀,尾巴,腿或嘴巴。在这项研究中,我们重点研究了斑点啄木鸟的非syrinx发声,即击鼓。击鼓过程是在树上短而重复的一系列动作中进行的击打动作,由雄性和雌性共同击打,以吸引伴侣并威慑对手。在这里,我们考虑了斑啄木鸟的击鼓模式是否特定于性别,以及它们是否可以进行个体识别。我们记录了击鼓的41只大啄木鸟(男26例,女9例,未成年6例)。使用一种自动方法来测量连续笔画之间的间隔,并计算击鼓中的笔画数。此处分析的击鼓时间参数在个体内部的变异系数低于个体之间的变异系数。判别函数分析正确地将70-88%的卷分配给了原始个体,但这取决于是否对所有个体进行了一起分析还是分为男性和女性。我们发现男性和女性之间的笔触间隔时间差异不大,但意义重大-男性的击鼓速度快于女性-但每卷的笔触数量没有差异。我们的研究表明,斑啄木鸟击鼓的时间模式不能用于明确的性别确定。取而代之的是,基于笔画之间的间隔和一卷笔画中笔画的数量,可以在个体之间进行区分。因此,有可能鸟类的鼓点时间参数中的差异可以被彼此识别,研究人员也可以被用于辅助普查和监测任务。

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