The role of male vs male interactions in maintaining population dialect structure |
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Authors: | Myron Charles Baker Daniel B. Thompson Gregory L. Sherman Michael A. Cunningham |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Zoology and Entomology, Colorado State University, 80523 Fort Collins, Colorado, USA |
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Abstract: | Summary Nonmigratory populations of Whitecrowned Sparrows in coastal California exhibit dialects in territorial male songs that are stable in space and time. By field playback experiments, we tested a prediction from the hypothesis that male aggressive interactions prohibit mixing of song dialects. Playback of the home dialect Clear song to territorial males singing the Clear dialect resulted in less response than that given to playback of the neighboring Buzzy dialect. Response to both Buzzy and Clear dialect songs by target Clear males, however, was greater than that given to the Bodega dialect recorded 55 km away (Figs. 2 and 3). We conclude that these results are consistent with the hypothesis that male-male aggressive interactions play an important role in reducing dialect mixing. |
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