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Hauptverfasser: Zhang, Jinggang, Zhao, Chenyang, Santema, Peter, Lin, Zixuan, Li, Jianqiang, Deng, Wenhong, Kempenaers, Bart
Format: Recurso digital
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Veröffentlicht: Zenodo 2025
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Online-Zugang:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14967388
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author Zhang, Jinggang
Zhao, Chenyang
Santema, Peter
Lin, Zixuan
Li, Jianqiang
Deng, Wenhong
Kempenaers, Bart
author_facet Zhang, Jinggang
Zhao, Chenyang
Santema, Peter
Lin, Zixuan
Li, Jianqiang
Deng, Wenhong
Kempenaers, Bart
contents <p>Animals often eavesdrop on signals intended for others to gather information about their environment. While adult animals have been shown to learn to recognize unfamiliar heterospecific alarm calls through both social and asocial learning, it remains unclear whether and how young animals learn to recognize unfamiliar alarm calls. We show experimentally that nestling Daurian redstarts <em>Phoenicurus auroreus</em> can socially learn to recognize unfamiliar heterospecific alarm signals by associating them with conspecific alarm calls. We trained nestlings by presenting two unfamiliar sounds, one together with conspecific alarm calls (training) and one without (control). Before training, nestlings showed similarly little response to both novel sounds. After training, however, nestlings showed clear anti-predator responses to the training sound, but not to the control sound. These results show that nestling birds can socially learn to associate novel sounds with known alarm calls, even without visual confirmation of danger.  </p>
format Recurso digital
id zenodo_https___doi_org_10_5281_zenodo_14967388
institution Zenodo
language
publishDate 2025
publisher Zenodo
record_format zenodo
spellingShingle Nestling birds learn socially to eavesdrop on heterospecific alarm calls through acoustic association
Zhang, Jinggang
Zhao, Chenyang
Santema, Peter
Lin, Zixuan
Li, Jianqiang
Deng, Wenhong
Kempenaers, Bart
nestlings
Daurian redstart
alarm call
nest predation
social learning
acoustic association
<p>Animals often eavesdrop on signals intended for others to gather information about their environment. While adult animals have been shown to learn to recognize unfamiliar heterospecific alarm calls through both social and asocial learning, it remains unclear whether and how young animals learn to recognize unfamiliar alarm calls. We show experimentally that nestling Daurian redstarts <em>Phoenicurus auroreus</em> can socially learn to recognize unfamiliar heterospecific alarm signals by associating them with conspecific alarm calls. We trained nestlings by presenting two unfamiliar sounds, one together with conspecific alarm calls (training) and one without (control). Before training, nestlings showed similarly little response to both novel sounds. After training, however, nestlings showed clear anti-predator responses to the training sound, but not to the control sound. These results show that nestling birds can socially learn to associate novel sounds with known alarm calls, even without visual confirmation of danger.  </p>
title Nestling birds learn socially to eavesdrop on heterospecific alarm calls through acoustic association
topic nestlings
Daurian redstart
alarm call
nest predation
social learning
acoustic association
url https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14967388