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Chick-a-dee call syntax,social context,and season affect vocal responses of Carolina chickadees (<Emphasis Type="Italic">Poecile carolinensis</Emphasis>)
Authors:Barbara?A?Clucas  Todd?M?Freeberg  Email author" target="_blank">Jeffrey?R?LucasEmail author
Institution:(1) Department of Biological Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907, USA;(2) Present address: Animal Behavior Graduate Group, University of California at Davis, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616, USA;(3) Present address: Department of Psychology, University of Tennessee, Austin Peay Building 303A, Knoxville, TN 37996, USA
Abstract:Chick-a-dee calls in many chickadee (Poecile) species are common vocal signals used in a diversity of social contacts. The calls consist of four notes, A, B, C, and D, which follow simple rules of syntax (note ordering and composition) to generate many unique call types. We used field playbacks with Carolina chickadees, P. carolinensis, to ask whether violations of a syntactical rule affected their vocal responses. We show that chickadee responses to typical calls (e.g. AAAACCCC and CCCCDDDD) differ from responses to atypical calls (e.g. CACACACA and DCDCDCDC) depending on playback note composition, season, and social context (presence of heterospecifics). In the fall/winter, playbacks of typical calls with A and C notes elicited the greatest number of A and B notes in chick-a-dee call responses and typical calls with D notes elicited the greatest number of C notes, when in the presence of heterospecifics. In contrast, the corresponding atypical calls did not elicit similar responses. This suggests communicative significance is lost in calls that violate a rule of syntax in the fall/winter. In the spring, neither chickadee feebeefeebay song rate nor chick-a-dee calls responses differed by playback type. We suggest that call syntax is less salient for mated pairs in the spring than it is for fall/winter flocks that rely more on conspecific communication for foraging success and flock cohesion. This study represents the first experimental evidence that chickadees attend to both note composition and ordering in chick-a-dee calls.Communicated by W.A. Searcy
Keywords:Carolina chickadee  Chick-a-dee call  Poecile  Syntax  Vocal communication
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