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Traffic noise and responses to a simulated approaching avian predator in mixed-species flocks of chickadees,titmice, and nuthatches
Authors:Hwayoung Jung  Atira Sherrod  Steven LeBreux  Joshua M Price  Todd M Freeberg
Institution:1. Department of Psychology, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee;2. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee;3. Office of Information Technology, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee
Abstract:Traffic noise likely reaches a wide range of species and populations throughout the world, but we still know relatively little about how it affects anti-predator behavior of populations. We tested for possible effects of traffic noise on responses to predator acoustic cues in Carolina chickadees (Poecile carolinensis), tufted titmice (Baeolophus bicolor), and white-breasted nuthatches (Sitta carolinensis) near 14 independent feeding stations in eastern Tennessee. We compared anti-predator calling and seed-taking behavior in response to playbacks of predator stimuli (screech owl calls) at sites naturally exposed to traffic noise and at sites that faced relatively little traffic noise. The screech owl call playback was designed to simulate the approach of this dangerous predator to a feeder being used by these small songbirds. We found that chickadees responded consistently to the owl stimuli across different levels of traffic noise. However, titmice, and nuthatches exhibited different behavioral responses to the predator stimulus, suggesting that traffic noise masked these low-frequency predator calls. Overall, chickadees and nuthatches showed the broadest anti-predator behavioral responses in comparison to titmice, corroborating earlier published work with an Indiana population. Finally, populations exposed to traffic noise overall seemed less able to detect predator cues potentially masked by that noise, and future work will need to assess likely seasonal variation in these responses as well as species-level variation in anti-predator responses in mixed-species groups.
Keywords:anthropogenic disturbance  anti-predator behavior  masking effect  mixed-species flocks  traffic noise
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