Geographic variation in vocalisations of the Military Macaw in western Mexico

Alejandro Salinas-Melgoza, Katherine Renton
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

ABSTRACT Geographic variation in acoustic signals may arise in vocal learning species due to processes of cultural evolution and population dynamics, but few studies have evaluated geographic vocal variation for large-bodied non-oscine species such as parrots. We evaluated similarity in a contact call of the Military Macaw (Ara militaris) among three populations along the coast of Jalisco, Mexico. We compared contact calls among sites using two approaches i) analysis of specific acoustic parameter measures using GLMM on Principal Components; and ii) evaluation of spectrogram similarity using cross-correlation with a Mantel test to evaluate site and distance effects. Acoustic parameter analysis found that incorporating the site where recordings were obtained significantly explained variation in call features, for both the complete and reduced, balanced dataset. The spectrogram cross-correlations similarity analysis indicated an association with site in spectral similarity of calls, and that call similarity decreased with distance. Our results demonstrated the accumulation of small, fine-scale changes in Military Macaw calls with distance, suggesting that large-bodied non-oscines such as macaws may be able to maintain connectivity among sites by dispersal, facilitating call diffusion, while limited movements among some populations may account for the differentiation among sites in call features.
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墨西哥西部军事金刚鹦鹉发声的地理差异
由于文化进化和种群动态的过程,声音信号的地理变异可能出现在发声学习物种中,但很少有研究评估鹦鹉等大型非发声物种的声音地理变异。我们在墨西哥哈利斯科州沿海的三个种群中评估了军事金刚鹦鹉(Ara militaris)的接触呼叫的相似性。我们使用两种方法比较了站点之间的接触呼叫:i)使用主成分上的GLMM分析特定声学参数测量;ii)利用交叉相关和Mantel测试来评估光谱图的相似性,以评估地点和距离的影响。声学参数分析发现,对于完整和减少的平衡数据集,合并获得录音的地点可以显着解释呼叫特征的变化。光谱图互相关相似度分析表明,鸣叫的光谱相似度与地点有关,且随距离的远近而降低。我们的研究结果表明,金刚鹦鹉的叫声会随着距离的增加而发生微小的、精细的变化,这表明金刚鹦鹉等大型非动物可能能够通过分散来保持不同地点之间的连通性,从而促进叫声的扩散,而一些种群之间的有限移动可能是叫声特征在不同地点之间差异的原因。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
25
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Bioacoustics primarily publishes high-quality original research papers and reviews on sound communication in birds, mammals, amphibians, reptiles, fish, insects and other invertebrates, including the following topics : -Communication and related behaviour- Sound production- Hearing- Ontogeny and learning- Bioacoustics in taxonomy and systematics- Impacts of noise- Bioacoustics in environmental monitoring- Identification techniques and applications- Recording and analysis- Equipment and techniques- Ultrasound and infrasound- Underwater sound- Bioacoustical sound structures, patterns, variation and repertoires
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