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Phylogenetic signal in the vocalizations of vocal learning and vocal non-learning birds
by
Fitch, W. Tecumseh
, Arato, Jozsef
in
Animals
/ Birds
/ Heredity
/ Learning
/ Phylogeny
/ Songbirds
/ Vocalization, Animal
2021
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Phylogenetic signal in the vocalizations of vocal learning and vocal non-learning birds
by
Fitch, W. Tecumseh
, Arato, Jozsef
in
Animals
/ Birds
/ Heredity
/ Learning
/ Phylogeny
/ Songbirds
/ Vocalization, Animal
2021
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Phylogenetic signal in the vocalizations of vocal learning and vocal non-learning birds
Journal Article
Phylogenetic signal in the vocalizations of vocal learning and vocal non-learning birds
2021
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Overview
Some animal vocalizations develop reliably in the absence of relevant experience, but an intriguing subset of animal vocalizations is learned: they require acoustic models during ontogeny in order to develop, and the learner's vocal output reflects those models. To what extent do such learned vocalizations reflect phylogeny? We compared the degree towhich phylogenetic signal is present in vocal signals fromawide taxonomic range of birds, including both vocal learners (songbirds) and vocal non-learners. We used publically available molecular phylogenies and developed methods to analyse spectral and temporal features in a carefully curated collection of high-quality recordings of bird songs and bird calls, to yield acoustic distance measures. Our methods were initially developed using pairs of closely related North American and European bird species, and then applied to a non-overlapping randomstratified sample of European birds. We found strong similarity in acoustic and genetic distances, which manifested itself as a significant phylogenetic signal, in both samples. In songbirds, both learned song and (mostly) unlearned calls allowed reconstruction of phylogenetic trees nearly isomorphic to the phylogenetic trees derived from genetic analysis. We conclude that phylogeny and inheritance constrain vocal structure to a surprising degree, even in learned birdsong.
This article is part of the theme issue 'Vocal learning in animals and humans'.
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