Authors
J Albert C Uy, Robert G Moyle, Christopher E Filardi
Publication date
2009/1/1
Journal
Evolution
Volume
63
Issue
1
Pages
153-164
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Inc
Description
Changes in mating signals among populations contribute to species formation. Often these signals involve a suite of display traits of different sensory modalities (“multimodal signals”); however, few studies have tested the consequences of multimodal signal divergence with most focusing on only a single divergent signal or suite of signals of the same sensory modality. Populations of the chestnut-bellied flycatcher Monarcha castaneiventris vary in song and plumage color across the Solomon Islands. Using taxidermic mount presentation and song playback experiments, we tested for the relative roles of divergent song and color in homotypic (“same type”) recognition between one pair of recently diverged sister taxa (the nominate chestnut-bellied M. c. castaneiventris and the white-capped M. c. richardsii forms). We found that both plumage and song type influenced the intensity of aggressive response by …
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