Oh, snap! A within-wing sonation in black-tailed trainbearers

Author:

Rico-Guevara Alejandro12ORCID,Echeverri-Mallarino Laura3,Clark Christopher J.4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA

2. Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98105, USA

3. Instituto de Ciencias Naturales, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Código Postal 11001, Bogotá, DC, Colombia

4. Department of Evolution, Ecology, and Organismal Biology, University of California, Riverside, CA 92521, USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT Vertebrates communicate through a wide variety of sounds, but few mechanisms of sound production, besides vocalization, are well understood. During high-speed dives, male trainbearer hummingbirds (Lesbia spp.) produce a repeated series of loud snaps. Hypotheses for these peculiar sounds include the birds employing their elongated tails and/or striking their wings against each other. Each snap to human ears seems like a single acoustic event, but sound recordings revealed that each snap is actually a couplet of impulsive, atonal sounds produced ∼13 ms apart. Analysis of high-speed videos refutes these previous hypotheses, and furthermore suggests that this sonation is produced by a within-wing mechanism – each instance of a sound coincided with a distinctive pair of deep wingbeats (with greater stroke amplitude, measured for one display sequence). Across many displays, we found a tight alignment between a pair of stereotyped deep wingbeats (in contrast to shallower flaps across the rest of the dive) and patterns of snap production, evidencing a 1:1 match between these sonations and stereotyped kinematics. Other birds including owls and poorwills are reported to produce similar sounds, suggesting that this mechanism of sound production could be somewhat common within birds, yet its physical acoustics remain poorly understood.

Funder

National Geographic Society

Walt Halperin Endowed Professorship

Washington Research Foundation

Idea Wild

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Insect Science,Molecular Biology,Animal Science and Zoology,Aquatic Science,Physiology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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