首页> 外文期刊>Ethology >Not for Parents Only: Begging Calls Allow Nest-Mate Discrimination in Juvenile Zebra Finches
【24h】

Not for Parents Only: Begging Calls Allow Nest-Mate Discrimination in Juvenile Zebra Finches

机译:不仅适用于父母:乞求的电话允许幼年斑马雀的巢穴伴侣歧视

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例
           

摘要

The benefits of recognition of family members may range from inbreeding avoidance to cooperative and coordinated behaviors within the family group. In birds, recognition of family members has almost exclusively been studied between parents and offspring or within cooperatively breeding societies. Yet, recognition of nest-mates could be of special importance in recently fledged birds of colonial species by helping in locating the nest, maintaining family group cohesion, or allowing detection of feeding opportunities by recognizing the begging calls nest-mates produced on the return of a parent. Here we study nest-mate discrimination based on begging calls in fledglings of domesticated zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata), a gregarious songbird living in loose colonies in which juveniles may gather in creches and are fed by parents up to 20d after fledging. Using playback tests, we show that fledglings called more and spent more time near the loudspeaker in response to the begging calls of their nest-mates than to the calls of other familiar individuals. Because each fledgling was exposed to the repeated association of the begging calls of its nest-mates and the subsequent feeding of its parents, this preferential response to the nest-mates' calls could be a conditioned response to the food reward. Whereas fledglings answered more to male fledgling calls than to female fledgling calls, response to playback was influenced neither by the sex of the subject nor by its brood size. Discriminant function analysis based on acoustic parameters showed that begging calls carried an individual signature as well as a brood signature which might account for such nest-mate discrimination. Begging signals are major study systems of the evolution of communication in the face of conflicts of interest between signalers and receivers. Our results suggest that eavesdropping and communication networks may be other informative frameworks to understand the design of offspring solicitation signals.
机译:承认家庭成员的好处可能包括近亲回避到家庭群体内部的合作与协调行为。在鸟类中,几乎只在父母与后代之间或在合作繁殖社会中研究了对家庭成员的识别。然而,通过帮助寻找巢穴,保持家族群的凝聚力,或者通过认识到归巢后产生的乞讨声援,允许识别觅食机会,对新近孵化的殖民地鸟类而言,对巢伙伴的识别可能特别重要。家长。在这里,我们根据驯养的斑马雀(Taeniopygia guttata)的雏鸟的乞讨声来研究巢伙伴的歧视,这是一种群居的鸣鸟,生活在散落的殖民地中,少年可能会聚集在拐杖中,并在出雏后20天内被父母喂养。通过回放测试,我们发现雏鸟呼唤更多的声音,并在扬声器附近花费更多的时间来响应其同伴的乞求,而不是其他熟悉的人的呼唤。由于每个雏鸟都反复受到巢友的乞讨和其父母随后的喂养的影响,因此对巢友的呼唤的这种优先响应可能是对食物奖励的有条件响应。相对于女性雏鸟来说,雏鸟对雄鸟雏鸟的回答要多,而对播放的响应既不受对象性别的影响,也不受其育雏规模的影响。基于声学参数的判别函数分析表明,乞讨电话带有单独的签名以及育雏签名,这可能说明了这种巢伴侣的歧视。面对信号发送者和接收者之间的利益冲突,乞讨信号是通信发展的主要研究系统。我们的结果表明,窃听和通信网络可能是了解后代征集信号设计的其他信息框架。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号