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1.
Food restrictions early in life can have adverse effects on the development of adult avian song structure. Nutritional deficiencies
during brain development are thought to impair the growth of neural circuits responsible for learning and production of song
in adulthood. Thus, the quality of song may reflect the quality of the singer due to the costs associated with neural development
early in life. Recent investigations have focused on domesticated laboratory strains of zebra finches where early dietary
deficiencies have significantly reduced the complexity of song and its sexual attractiveness. Domesticated zebra finches may
be more sensitive to the early effects of moderate under-nutrition on song complexity than their non-domesticated counterparts.
In an aviary experiment with non-domesticated zebra finch stock, we found that song complexity when measured by a linear combination
of six variables was reduced in food-restricted birds, with syllable rate and maximum syllable frequency as the principal
variables affected. The restriction had no effect on learning accuracy when song phrases of experimental birds were compared
to those of their fathers.This result demonstrates that early nutrition may differentially affect the development of neural
processes that influence learning accuracy and song complexity. While the finding of negative effects of dietary restriction
on song complexity is robust for zebra finches and is not an artefact of domestication, it does not explain why some nutritionally
stressed populations of wild zebra finches have more complex songs than those from other regions of Australia characterised
by greater food availability. 相似文献
2.
K. A. Spencer J. H. Wimpenny K. L. Buchanan P. G. Lovell A. R. Goldsmith C. K. Catchpole 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2005,58(4):423-428
Developmental stress has recently been shown to have adverse effects upon adult male song structure in birds, which may well act as an honest signal of male quality to discriminating females. However, it still remains to be shown if females can discriminate between the songs of stressed and non-stressed males. Here we use a novel experimental design using an active choice paradigm to investigate preferences in captive female zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata). Nine females were exposed to ten pairs of songs by previously stressed and non-stressed birds that had learned their song from the same tutor. Song pairs differed significantly in terms of song complexity, with songs of stressed males exhibiting lower numbers of syllables and fewer different syllables in a phrase. Song rate and peak frequency did not differ between stressed and non-stressed males. Females showed a significant preference for non-stressed songs in terms of directed perching activity and time spent on perches. Our results therefore indicate that developmental stress affects not only the structure of male song, but that such structural differences are biologically relevant to female mate choice decisions. 相似文献
3.
Rindy C. Anderson Stephen Nowicki William A. Searcy 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2007,61(8):1267-1274
Low-amplitude “soft song” is used by a variety of songbirds; in some species during aggressive encounters, in others during
courtship, and yet others in both these contexts. In song sparrows (Melospiza melodia), soft song has thus far been observed only in aggressive encounters, where its production is a more reliable predictor of
attack than any other signaling behavior. We used song playback to test the response of both male and female song sparrows
to soft song. The design of the playback experiments took into account the existence of two classes of soft song: crystallized
soft song, which consists of song types also found in the broadcast repertoire, and warbled soft song, which consists of less-structured
song types not found in the broadcast repertoire. Female song sparrows responded with significantly less courtship display
to the playback of crystallized soft song than to that of normal broadcast song, and response to warbled soft song was if
anything lower than to that of crystallized soft song. Male song sparrows responded equally aggressively to normal broadcast
song as to crystallized soft song, and equally aggressively to warbled soft song as to crystallized soft song. The female
results support the conclusion that neither form of soft song functions in courtship. The male results suggest that the reliability
of soft song as a signal of aggressive intent is not maintained by a receiver retaliation rule. 相似文献