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The effect of isolation, fragmentation, and population bottlenecks on song structure of a Hawaiian honeycreeper

机译:隔离,碎片化和人口瓶颈对夏威夷蜜爬行者歌曲结构的影响

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Little is known about how important social behaviors such as song vary within and among populations for any of the endemic Hawaiian honeycreepers. Habitat loss and non‐native diseases (e.g., avian malaria) have resulted in isolation and fragmentation of Hawaiian honeycreepers within primarily high elevation forests. In this study, we examined how isolation of Hawai'i ‘amakihi ( Chlorodrepanis virens ) populations within a fragmented landscape influences acoustic variability in song. In the last decade, small, isolated populations of disease tolerant ‘amakihi have been found within low elevation forests, allowing us to record ‘amakihi songs across a large elevational gradient (10–1800?m) that parallels disease susceptibility on Hawai'i island. To understand underlying differences among populations, we examined the role of geographic distance, elevation, and habitat structure on acoustic characteristics of ‘amakihi songs. We found that the acoustic characteristics of ‘amakihi songs and song‐type repertoires varied most strongly across an elevational gradient. Differences in ‘amakihi song types were primarily driven by less complex songs (e.g., fewer frequency changes, shorter songs) of individuals recorded at low elevation sites compared to mid and high elevation populations. The reduced complexity of ‘amakihi songs at low elevation sites is most likely shaped by the effects of habitat fragmentation and a disease‐driven population bottleneck associated with avian malaria, and maintained through isolation, localized song learning and sharing, and cultural drift. These results highlight how a non‐native disease through its influence on population demographics may have also indirectly played a role in shaping the acoustic characteristics of a species.
机译:对于任何流行的夏威夷蜜爬行者,诸如歌曲之类的重要社交行为在人群内部和人群之间如何变化,人们所知甚少。栖息地的丧失和非原生疾病(例如禽类疟疾)已导致夏威夷蜜cre在主要高海拔森林中被隔离和破碎。在这项研究中,我们研究了在零散的景观中隔离夏威夷人'amakihi(Chlorodrepanis virens)种群如何影响歌曲的声学变异性。在过去的十年中,在低海拔森林中发现了一些小的孤立的耐病'amakihi种群,这使我们能够在夏威夷海拔较高的海拔梯度(10-1800?m)上录制'amakihi歌曲。为了了解人群之间的根本差异,我们研究了地理距离,海拔和栖息地结构对“ amakihi歌曲”声学特性的作用。我们发现,‘amakihi歌曲和歌曲类型曲目的声学特性在整个海拔梯度上变化最大。与中高海拔人群相比,低海拔地区记录的个人不太复杂的歌曲(例如,频率变化较少,歌曲较短)是造成“ amakihi歌曲类型”差异的主要原因。低海拔地区'amakihi歌曲的复杂性降低很可能是由于栖息地破碎化和与禽类疟疾相关的疾病驱动的人口瓶颈的影响所致,并通过隔离,本地歌曲学习和共享以及文化漂移来维持。这些结果凸显了非本地疾病如何通过其对人口统计学的影响而间接地影响了物种的声学特性。

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