Unlearned adaptive responses to heterospecific referential alarm calls in two bird species from separate evolutionary lineages

Author:

Ha Jungmoon1,Lee Keesan1,Yang Eunjeong1,Kim Woojoo1,Song Hokyung2,Hwang Injae3,Lee-Cruz Larisa4,Park Jinseok1,Song Jihyeon1,Park Chan-ryeol5,Lee Wooshin1,Jablonski Piotr1,Lee Sang-Im1

Affiliation:

1. Seoul National University

2. Jeju National University

3. National Institute of Biological Resources

4. INRAE - UMR TETIS

5. National Institute of Forest Science

Abstract

Abstract The interspecific responses to alarm signals may be based on unlearned mechanisms but research is often constrained by the difficulties in differentiating between unlearned and learned responses in natural situations. In a field study of two Paridae species, Parus minor and Sittiparus varius, who originated from a common ancestor 8 million years ago, we found a considerable degree of between-species overlap in acoustic properties of referential snake-alarm calls. Playback of these calls triggered unlearned adaptive fledging behavior in conspecific and heterospecific naive nestlings, suggesting a between-species overlap in the hypothetical unlearned neural templates involved in nestlings’ reactions to alarm calls in both species. This suggests that similar calls and similar unlearned sensitivity might have been present in the common ancestor of the two species, and possibly in the ancestor of the whole family Paridae that originated 10–15 million years ago in warm Asian regions rich in snakes.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference74 articles.

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4. Magrath, R. D., Pitcher, B. J. & Gardner, J. L. Recognition of other species' aerial alarm calls: speaking the same language or learning another?. Proc. R. Soc. B-Biol. Sci. 276, 769–774 (2009).

5. Magrath, R. D. & Bennett, T. H. A micro-geography of fear: learning to eavesdrop on alarm calls of neighbouring heterospecifics. Proc. R. Soc. B-Biol. Sci. 279, 902–909 (2012).

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