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Chronic exposure to urban noise during the vocal learning period does not lead to increased song frequencies in zebra finches

机译:在声乐学习期间,慢性接触城市噪音不会导致斑马雀的歌曲频率增加

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It has often been observed that birds sing at a higher pitch in cities and other areas that are polluted with intense low-frequency noise. How this pattern arises remains unclear though. One prevailing idea is that songbirds adjust song frequencies to environmental noise profiles through developmental plasticity via vocal learning. However, the conclusions of previous studies testing this hypothesis are inconsistent. Here we report the findings from two song learning experiments with zebra finches (Taenopygia guttata), in which we exposed young birds to anthropogenic noise during their sensitive vocal learning period. Unlike previous studies that addressed this issue, we did not use constant synthetic noise but natural urban noise with its typical amplitude fluctuations that was broadcast at realistic sound levels. We found that noise-exposed males in neither experiment developed higher pitched songs compared to control males. This suggests that the natural fluctuations between higher and lower noise levels in cities may allow young birds to exploit relatively quiet moments to hear their tutors and themselves, permitting them to make accurate copies of even low-frequency song elements.Significance statementIf animals are to persist in urban habitats, they often must adjust their behavior to the altered conditions. Birds in cities are often observed to sing at a higher pitch, but we are largely ignorant of how this phenomenon arises. We investigated whether low-frequency traffic noise interferes with the song learning of birds so that they develop higher pitched songs. Accordingly, we played back natural traffic noise from urban bird habitats to young birds during their learning period and then analyzed their adult songs. We found that birds that learned their songs in noise did not sing at higher frequencies compared to control males that learned their song with no noise exposure. Our results show that typical traffic noise in cities may not be sufficient to interfere with vocal learning in a way that birds develop higher-pitched songs.
机译:人们经常观察到,在受到强烈低频噪声污染的城市和其他地区,鸟类的鸣叫声更高。然而,这种模式是如何产生的尚不清楚。一种流行的观点是,鸣禽通过发声学习的发育可塑性,根据环境噪声的分布来调整鸣禽的鸣叫频率。然而,之前检验这一假设的研究结论并不一致。在这里,我们报告了两个用斑马雀(Taenopygia guttata)进行的歌唱学习实验的结果,在这两个实验中,我们在幼鸟敏感的发声学习期间将其暴露在人为噪声中。与之前解决这个问题的研究不同,我们没有使用恒定的合成噪声,而是使用在真实声级下播放的具有典型振幅波动的自然城市噪声。我们发现,在这两个实验中,与对照组相比,暴露于噪音中的雄性都不能发出更高音调的歌曲。这表明,城市中较高和较低噪音水平之间的自然波动可能使幼鸟能够利用相对安静的时刻来聆听导师和自己的声音,从而使它们能够准确地复制低频歌曲元素。重要声明如果动物要在城市栖息地生存,它们通常必须调整自己的行为以适应变化的环境。人们经常观察到城市中的鸟类以更高的音调歌唱,但我们基本上不知道这种现象是如何产生的。我们调查了低频交通噪声是否会干扰鸟类的鸣叫学习,从而使它们发出更高音调的鸣叫。因此,我们将城市鸟类栖息地的自然交通噪音回放给幼鸟学习期间的声音,然后分析它们的成年歌曲。我们发现,与在无噪声环境下学习歌曲的对照雄性相比,在噪声环境下学习歌曲的鸟类不会以更高的频率唱歌。我们的研究结果表明,城市中典型的交通噪声可能不足以干扰鸟类的发声学习,而鸟类会发出更高的音调。

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