Acoustic individuality in the hissing calls of the male black grouse (Lyrurus tetrix)

Acoustic individuality may well play a big role during the mating season of many birds. Black grouse (Lyrurus tetrix) produces two different long-distance calls during mating on leks: rookooing and hissing calls. The first one represents low frequency series of bubbling sounds and the second one rep...

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Main Authors: Lucie Hambálková, Richard Policht, Jiří Horák, Vlastimil Hart
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2021-09-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/11837.pdf
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spelling doaj-3a0fe3d7562745b7ad49b3f5b1102dd32021-09-11T15:05:05ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592021-09-019e1183710.7717/peerj.11837Acoustic individuality in the hissing calls of the male black grouse (Lyrurus tetrix)Lucie HambálkováRichard PolichtJiří HorákVlastimil HartAcoustic individuality may well play a big role during the mating season of many birds. Black grouse (Lyrurus tetrix) produces two different long-distance calls during mating on leks: rookooing and hissing calls. The first one represents low frequency series of bubbling sounds and the second one represents hissing sound. This hissing represents a signal not produced by the syrinx. We analyzed 426 hissing calls from 24 individuals in Finland and Scotland. We conducted cross-validated discrimination analyses (DFA). The discrimination model classified each call with almost 78% accuracy (conventional result) and the validated DFA revealed 71% output, that is much higher than classification by chance (4%). The most important variables were Frequency 95%, 1st Quartile Frequency, Aggregate Entropy and Duration 90%. We also tested whether between individual variation is higher than within individual variation using PIC (Potential for individual coding) and we found that all acoustic parameters had PIC > 1. We confirmed that hissing call of black grouse is individually distinct. In comparison to the signals produced by the syrinx, non-vocal sounds have been studied rarely and according to our knowledge, this is the second evidence of vocal individuality in avian hissing sounds which are not produced by syrinx. Individuality in the vocalization of the male black grouse may aid females in mating partner selection, and for males it may enable competitor recognition and assessment. Individually distinct hissing calls could be of possible use to monitor individuals on leks. Such a method could overcome problems during traditional monitoring methods of this species, when one individual can be counted multiple times, because catching and traditional marking is problematic in this species.https://peerj.com/articles/11837.pdfAcoustic individualityHissing callLyrurus tetrixMonitoringPhasianidae
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lucie Hambálková
Richard Policht
Jiří Horák
Vlastimil Hart
spellingShingle Lucie Hambálková
Richard Policht
Jiří Horák
Vlastimil Hart
Acoustic individuality in the hissing calls of the male black grouse (Lyrurus tetrix)
PeerJ
Acoustic individuality
Hissing call
Lyrurus tetrix
Monitoring
Phasianidae
author_facet Lucie Hambálková
Richard Policht
Jiří Horák
Vlastimil Hart
author_sort Lucie Hambálková
title Acoustic individuality in the hissing calls of the male black grouse (Lyrurus tetrix)
title_short Acoustic individuality in the hissing calls of the male black grouse (Lyrurus tetrix)
title_full Acoustic individuality in the hissing calls of the male black grouse (Lyrurus tetrix)
title_fullStr Acoustic individuality in the hissing calls of the male black grouse (Lyrurus tetrix)
title_full_unstemmed Acoustic individuality in the hissing calls of the male black grouse (Lyrurus tetrix)
title_sort acoustic individuality in the hissing calls of the male black grouse (lyrurus tetrix)
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Acoustic individuality may well play a big role during the mating season of many birds. Black grouse (Lyrurus tetrix) produces two different long-distance calls during mating on leks: rookooing and hissing calls. The first one represents low frequency series of bubbling sounds and the second one represents hissing sound. This hissing represents a signal not produced by the syrinx. We analyzed 426 hissing calls from 24 individuals in Finland and Scotland. We conducted cross-validated discrimination analyses (DFA). The discrimination model classified each call with almost 78% accuracy (conventional result) and the validated DFA revealed 71% output, that is much higher than classification by chance (4%). The most important variables were Frequency 95%, 1st Quartile Frequency, Aggregate Entropy and Duration 90%. We also tested whether between individual variation is higher than within individual variation using PIC (Potential for individual coding) and we found that all acoustic parameters had PIC > 1. We confirmed that hissing call of black grouse is individually distinct. In comparison to the signals produced by the syrinx, non-vocal sounds have been studied rarely and according to our knowledge, this is the second evidence of vocal individuality in avian hissing sounds which are not produced by syrinx. Individuality in the vocalization of the male black grouse may aid females in mating partner selection, and for males it may enable competitor recognition and assessment. Individually distinct hissing calls could be of possible use to monitor individuals on leks. Such a method could overcome problems during traditional monitoring methods of this species, when one individual can be counted multiple times, because catching and traditional marking is problematic in this species.
topic Acoustic individuality
Hissing call
Lyrurus tetrix
Monitoring
Phasianidae
url https://peerj.com/articles/11837.pdf
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