Authors
Dana Lynn Moseley, Graham Earnest Derryberry, Jennifer Nicole Phillips, Julie Elizabeth Danner, Raymond Michael Danner, David Andrew Luther, Elizabeth Perrault Derryberry
Publication date
2018/10/10
Journal
Proceedings of the Royal Society B
Volume
285
Issue
1888
Pages
20181356
Publisher
The Royal Society
Description
Anthropogenic noise imposes novel selection pressures, especially on species that communicate acoustically. Many animals—including insects, frogs, whales and birds—produce sounds at higher frequencies in areas with low-frequency noise pollution. Although there is support for animals changing their vocalizations in real time in response to noise (i.e. immediate flexibility), other evolutionary mechanisms for animals that learn their vocalizations remain largely unexplored. We hypothesize that cultural selection for signal structures less masked by noise is a mechanism of acoustic adaptation to anthropogenic noise. We test this hypothesis by presenting nestling white-crowned sparrows (Zonotrichia leucophyrs) with less-masked (higher-frequency) and more-masked (lower-frequency) tutor songs either during playback of anthropogenic noise (noise-tutored treatment) or at a different time from noise playback …
Total citations
20192020202120222023510161214
Scholar articles
DL Moseley, GE Derryberry, JN Phillips, JE Danner… - Proceedings of the Royal Society B, 2018