Why is the early bird early? An evaluation of hypotheses for avian dawn-biased vocal activity

  • 1K Lisa Yang Center for Conservation Bioacoustics, Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA.
  • 2Project Dhvani, Bangalore, India.

Abstract

Bird species vary widely in their diurnal vocalization patterns, and the drivers of this variation are not well understood. Using passive acoustic monitoring, we examined species-specific vocal activity patterns at dawn and dusk for a tropical bird community in the Western Ghats biodiversity hotspot in India. We tested whether environmental factors (e.g. signal transmission conditions, ambient light, and resource availability) and social factors (e.g. territoriality) best-explained patterns of diurnal variation in vocal activity. Overall, we found that species-specific vocal activity was significantly higher at dawn (p < 0.05). Phylogenetic generalized least squares regressions revealed that territoriality and diet both predicted stronger dawn-biased activity. Specifically, highly territorial birds (standardized effect size (SES) = 1.20, lower donfidence interval (LCI)= 0.24, upper confidence interval (UCI) = 2.16, p = 0.01) and omnivores (SES = 0.82, LCI = -0.04, UCI = 1.68, p = 0.06) had higher levels of vocal activity at dawn. Surprisingly, we failed to find any evidence in support of environmental factors in explaining dawn-biased vocal activity. Our multi-taxon approach allowed us to assess the vocal activity patterns for an entire tropical bird community. Future research must incorporate additional geographic locations and combine visual and aural observations to better understand the drivers of diurnal variation in vocal activity.This article is part of the theme issue 'Acoustic monitoring for tropical ecology and conservation'.

Related Concept Videos

Testing a Claim about Mean: Unknown Population SD 01:21

3.4K

A complete procedure of testing a hypothesis about a population mean when the population standard deviation is unknown is explained here.
Estimating a population mean requires the samples to be approximately normally distributed. The data should be collected from the randomly selected samples having no sampling bias. There is no specific requirement for sample size. But if the sample size is less than 30, and we don't know the population standard deviation, a different approach is used;...

Conservation of Declining Populations 02:07

9.6K

Conservation of declining population focuses on ways of detecting, diagnosing, and halting a population decline. The approach uses methods to prevent populations from going extinct.

Conservation efforts often utilize scientific approaches to identify the reasons, or the agents, causing the population to decline. This approach then devises steps to remove, oppose, or neutralize the agents.

Conservation efforts may also introduce a test group to determine the probable cause of the decline. The...

Mate Choice 01:20

8.0K

Mate choice—the decision about whom to mate with—is a type of natural selection, since animals must reproduce to pass down their genes. Mate choice is also called intersexual selection because the behavior occurs between the sexes.

In species with mate choice, one sex (usually, but not always, the female) is “choosy,” selecting a mate from individuals of the opposite sex based on appearance or behavioral characteristics. Often, females will choose “showier”...