Title: Bird Song and Learning
1Bird Song and Learning
- Parrots, Humming Birds and Song Birds (taxonomic
order, Passeriformes) - Passerines divided into Oscines that learn their
song (46 of the 9,000 bird species) and
Suboscines that have an innate song (12)
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3Sonogram of a Suboscine
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6Darwins Finches
- Galapagos Islands Sympatric speciation
- Seed eaters versus insect eaters
- Heavy squat beaks for cracking seeds, versus long
narrow beaks for getting insects - Low frequency for large beaks, high frequency
complex song for long beaks
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8How is Song Learned?
- Peter Marlers work on white crowned sparrows
- Raised in isolation WCS do not sing a species
typical song - Tape playback in lab raised WCS
9Data Based on Tape playback
- Innate bias for species specific song
- Memory stored between days 10 and 50 post-hatch
(critical period) - Produce song at 150 days post-hatch
- Auditory feedback for complete song at 200 days
- Irreversible--crystallized song
10Zebra Finch Song in Normal and Deafened offspring
11LaboratoryTape Playback Theory of Song Learning
12Problems With the Tape Playback Theory
- Babtista and Petrinovich observed WCS in nature
singing another species song - Suggest that the social stimulation of a live
tutor is important - Found 10 to 50 day critical period is too short,
alien species song may be learned, song may be
modified as an adult
13Neural Control of Song
- Sex-Determining Chromosomes XX female, XY
male in mammals, in birds ZW female and ZZ
male - W chromosome has fewer genes than Z
- Females dont sing, only males sing
- Females do memorize song, but their brain doesnt
develop to allow production
14Steps in the Development of Males Brain for Song
(Neuroethology)
- Testes produce testostrerone
- Brain centers such as the higher vocal center
(HVC) are sensitive to testosterone - Males develop song centers females dont
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16Zebra Finches (Taeniopygia guttata) Male and
female and home range
17Song Storage (memory)
- Hear and see tutor
- Stimulation of cells in the IMAN area of the
brain and area X - Genes in neuron are turned on
- New production of proteins
- Reshaped neuronal structure
- IMAN area is much larger in oscines than in
suboscines
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19Production of Song
- Syrinx is like the larynx
- It is connected to the nXIIts which receives
input from RA and HVC - Lesions of the RA or HVC or their connections
produce a deficit in song - The size of the RA is greater in males that
females
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22Neural Changes that Produce song
- Selfstimulation of rough version of song
- The gene ZENK is activated in area X
- Altered proteins as song is perfected
- Once crystallized ZENK activity subsides
- Permanent neural circuitry is in place
23Why Do Birds Sing?
- Kin Recognition Who is in the family?
- Species recognition Who should I mate with?
- Neighbor recognition Good fences make good
neighbors - Territory marker and mate guarding
- Mate selection Good singers make good lovers
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25Song and Mate Selection
- Louder, longer and more complex songs signal good
genes and good development - A strong singer is less likely to have parasitic
infections, a heritable trait - Strong singers (large HVC) had a better diet
during early development
26Time spent sitting near the location of a tape of
a male starling
27Two weeks of free food (control) or two weeks of
70 (experimental)
28Females removal results in increased singing
29Song as an Honest Marker
- Physical or behavioral traits have a cost
- Conspicuous to predators
- Energetic costs
- Handicap principle
- Females pay attention to the song quality
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31Female Sexually Receptivity Displays to Different
Songs
32Song Learning as an Adult
- Cowbirds (Molothrus ater) are reproductive
parasites - Female lays eggs in another species nest
- Since the hatchlings are deprived of conspecific
song, it was thought their song was unlearned - Male cowbirds raised in isolation do sing a
potent song
33Learning in Cowbirds
- Male sings one of his songs, female wing
strokes to indicate approval - Male repeats song several times after wing
stroking - Beak gapes also used as positive feedback
34Female Cowbird
35Male Cowbird
36Context Specific Male Song
- Dominant males sing the most potent songs
- Females agree on which are potent and which are
not - Subordinate male may be attacked and killed if he
sings too potent of a song - Very different from white crowned sparrows
37Some General Conclusions About Song Learning
- Learning can occur in the absence of performance
(WCS, Zebra Finches) - Learning can occur along with performance
(Cowbirds) - Practice and feedback are needed to perfect the
song - Learning may be restricted to certain
developmental periods (critical or sensitive
periods?)
38Conclusions Functional Aspects
- Marker of good health
- Sexually selected Males know when and how to
sing, females respond in an appropriate way - Species and kin identification
- Territorial boundaries
- Learning is a very useful adaptation
39Song Sparrow