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Dawn song of male blue tits as a predictor of competitiveness in midmorning singing interactions
Authors:Angelika?Poesel  author-information"  >  author-information__contact u-icon-before"  >  mailto:apoesel@zi.ku.dk"   title="  apoesel@zi.ku.dk"   itemprop="  email"   data-track="  click"   data-track-action="  Email author"   data-track-label="  "  >Email author,Torben?Dabelsteen,Simon?Boel?Pedersen
Affiliation:(1) Department of Animal Behaviour & Centre for Sound Communication, Zoological Institute, University of Copenhagen, Tagensvej 16, 2200 Copenhagen N, Denmark
Abstract:During the dawn chorus, territorial male songbirds vocalise intensively within signalling range of several conspecific males and can therefore be considered members of a busy communication network. The more or less continuous singing over a long period of time under standardised stimulus conditions makes the dawn song a potentially important information source both for simple receivers and for eavesdroppers. Male blue tits (Parus caeruleus) vary in features of their dawn song, e.g. older males sing longer strophes, and females choose males that sing longer strophes as extra-pair partners. However, so far, dawn song in the blue tit has been investigated separately from other singing behaviour of the same males. In this study, we investigate aspects of blue tit male quality, reflected in dawn song characteristics, and their predictive value for how males behave during singing interactions later in the morning. We acted as simple receivers by recording the singing activity of one male at a time at dawn and compared features of its dawn song, such as onset before sunrise, repertoire size, mean bout length, strophe length and percentage performance time to responses of the same male to a territory intrusion simulated by playback of synthesised songs later during the same morning. We assume that an aggressive response towards an intruder will involve a fast approach to the loudspeaker broadcasting strophes of blue tit song, searching for the intruder (flying around), and a high amount of counter singing and overlapping of the intruderrsquos songs. Aspects of vigour of response to the simulated intrusion could be predicted from all five investigated dawn song parameters as well as male age. This is, to our knowledge, the first indication that a simple receiver could extract reliable information from a malersquos dawn singing behaviour about its competitiveness later in the day.Communicated by P.K. McGregor
Keywords:Dawn song  Parus caeruleus  Singing interaction
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