» Articles » PMID: 26064641

Mountain Chickadees from Different Elevations Sing Different Songs: Acoustic Adaptation, Temporal Drift or Signal of Local Adaptation?

Overview
Journal R Soc Open Sci
Specialty Science
Date 2015 Jun 12
PMID 26064641
Citations 3
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Song in songbirds is widely thought to function in mate choice and male-male competition. Song is also phenotypically plastic and typically learned from local adults; therefore, it varies across geographical space and can serve as a cue for an individual's location of origin, with females commonly preferring males from their respective location. Geographical variation in song dialect may reflect acoustic adaptation to different environments and/or serve as a signal of local adaptation. In montane environments, environmental differences can occur over an elevation gradient, favouring local adaptations across small spatial scales. We tested whether food caching mountain chickadees, known to exhibit elevation-related differences in food caching intensity, spatial memory and the hippocampus, also sing different dialects despite continuous distribution and close proximity. Male songs were collected from high and low elevations at two different mountains (separated by 35 km) to test whether song differs between elevations and/or between adjacent populations at each mountain. Song structure varied significantly between high and low elevation adjacent populations from the same mountain and between populations from different mountains at the same elevations, despite a continuous distribution across each mountain slope. These results suggest that elevation-related differences in song structure in chickadees might serve as a signal for local adaptation.

Citing Articles

Like Father Like Son: Cultural and Genetic Contributions to Song Inheritance in an Estrildid Finch.

Lewis R, Soma M, de Kort S, Gilman R Front Psychol. 2021; 12:654198.

PMID: 34149539 PMC: 8213215. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.654198.


Social network architecture and the tempo of cumulative cultural evolution.

Cantor M, Chimento M, Smeele S, He P, Papageorgiou D, Aplin L Proc Biol Sci. 2021; 288(1946):20203107.

PMID: 33715438 PMC: 7944107. DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2020.3107.


Absence of population structure across elevational gradients despite large phenotypic variation in mountain chickadees ().

Branch C, Jahner J, Kozlovsky D, Parchman T, Pravosudov V R Soc Open Sci. 2017; 4(3):170057.

PMID: 28405402 PMC: 5383859. DOI: 10.1098/rsos.170057.

References
1.
Miyasato , Baker . Black-capped chickadee call dialects along a continuous habitat corridor. Anim Behav. 1999; 57(6):1311-1318. DOI: 10.1006/anbe.1999.1109. View

2.
MacDougall-Shackleton E, MacDougall-Shackleton S . Cultural and genetic evolution in mountain white-crowned sparrows: song dialects are associated with population structure. Evolution. 2002; 55(12):2568-75. DOI: 10.1111/j.0014-3820.2001.tb00769.x. View

3.
Gimenez-Benavides L, Escudero A, Iriondo J . Local adaptation enhances seedling recruitment along an altitudinal gradient in a high mountain mediterranean plant. Ann Bot. 2007; 99(4):723-34. PMC: 2802927. DOI: 10.1093/aob/mcm007. View

4.
Slabbekoorn H, Ripmeester E . Birdsong and anthropogenic noise: implications and applications for conservation. Mol Ecol. 2007; 17(1):72-83. DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2007.03487.x. View

5.
Lohr B . Pitch-related cues in the songs of sympatric mountain and black-capped chickadees. Behav Processes. 2007; 77(2):156-65. DOI: 10.1016/j.beproc.2007.11.003. View