Raven food calls indicate sender’s age and sex

Abstract Background Acoustic parameters of animal signals have been shown to correlate with various phenotypic characteristics of the sender. These acoustic characteristics can be learned and categorized and thus are a basis for perceivers’ recognition abilities. One of the most demanding capacities...

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Published in:Frontiers in Zoology
Main Authors: Markus Boeckle, Georgine Szipl, Thomas Bugnyar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-03-01
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12983-018-0255-z
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author Markus Boeckle
Georgine Szipl
Thomas Bugnyar
author_facet Markus Boeckle
Georgine Szipl
Thomas Bugnyar
author_sort Markus Boeckle
collection DOAJ
container_title Frontiers in Zoology
description Abstract Background Acoustic parameters of animal signals have been shown to correlate with various phenotypic characteristics of the sender. These acoustic characteristics can be learned and categorized and thus are a basis for perceivers’ recognition abilities. One of the most demanding capacities is individual recognition, achievable only after repeated interactions with the same individual. Still, class-level recognition might be potentially important to perceivers who have not previously encountered callers but can classify unknown individuals according to the already learned categories. Especially for species with high fission-fusion dynamics that repeatedly encounter unknown individuals it may be advantageous to develop class-level recognition. We tested whether frequency-, temporal-, and amplitude-related acoustic parameters of vocalizations emitted by ravens, a species showing high fission-fusion dynamics in non-breeder aggregations, are connected to phenotypic characteristics and thus have the potential for class-level recognition. Results The analysis of 418 food calls revealed that some components summarizing acoustic parameters were differentiated by age-classes and sex. Conclusions Together, the results provide evidence for the co-variation of vocal characteristics and respective sex and age categories, a prerequisite for class-level recognition in perceivers. Perceivers that are ignorant of the caller’s identity can thus potentially recognize these class-level differences for decision-making processes in feeding contexts.
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spelling doaj-art-e8b41a09f3924ea3bb853e1b3ee6c1182025-08-19T19:58:19ZengBMCFrontiers in Zoology1742-99942018-03-011511910.1186/s12983-018-0255-zRaven food calls indicate sender’s age and sexMarkus Boeckle0Georgine Szipl1Thomas Bugnyar2Department of Cognitive Biology, University of ViennaDepartment of Cognitive Biology, University of ViennaDepartment of Cognitive Biology, University of ViennaAbstract Background Acoustic parameters of animal signals have been shown to correlate with various phenotypic characteristics of the sender. These acoustic characteristics can be learned and categorized and thus are a basis for perceivers’ recognition abilities. One of the most demanding capacities is individual recognition, achievable only after repeated interactions with the same individual. Still, class-level recognition might be potentially important to perceivers who have not previously encountered callers but can classify unknown individuals according to the already learned categories. Especially for species with high fission-fusion dynamics that repeatedly encounter unknown individuals it may be advantageous to develop class-level recognition. We tested whether frequency-, temporal-, and amplitude-related acoustic parameters of vocalizations emitted by ravens, a species showing high fission-fusion dynamics in non-breeder aggregations, are connected to phenotypic characteristics and thus have the potential for class-level recognition. Results The analysis of 418 food calls revealed that some components summarizing acoustic parameters were differentiated by age-classes and sex. Conclusions Together, the results provide evidence for the co-variation of vocal characteristics and respective sex and age categories, a prerequisite for class-level recognition in perceivers. Perceivers that are ignorant of the caller’s identity can thus potentially recognize these class-level differences for decision-making processes in feeding contexts.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12983-018-0255-zCorvus coraxRavenFood callSexAgeCall production
spellingShingle Markus Boeckle
Georgine Szipl
Thomas Bugnyar
Raven food calls indicate sender’s age and sex
Corvus corax
Raven
Food call
Sex
Age
Call production
title Raven food calls indicate sender’s age and sex
title_full Raven food calls indicate sender’s age and sex
title_fullStr Raven food calls indicate sender’s age and sex
title_full_unstemmed Raven food calls indicate sender’s age and sex
title_short Raven food calls indicate sender’s age and sex
title_sort raven food calls indicate sender s age and sex
topic Corvus corax
Raven
Food call
Sex
Age
Call production
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12983-018-0255-z
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