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11 February 2022 Females and Males Sing Distinctly Different Songs in a Temperate Zone Songbird
Pengfei Liu, Meng Lai, Mingjie Wang, Yuehua Sun
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Abstract

Female song is widespread across songbirds, especially in tropical and subtropical species, in which females sing for resource defence, competition with intruders and mutual mate-guarding. We compared songs of males and females, produced spontaneously in a wild population of the Plain Laughingthrush Pterorhinus davidi, a songbird endemic to temperate China. We found that both sexes sing in this species and the number of notes within a song differed significantly between the two sexes. Females generally produced a longer first note than downstream notes; however, males sang in more variable frequencies than females. Males and females also differed significantly in song duration, pace and note structure. Sex-specific songs may indicate different functions and social and/or sexual selective pressures. Further studies are required to determine the functions of female song in this temperate zone passerine bird.

Pengfei Liu, Meng Lai, Mingjie Wang, and Yuehua Sun "Females and Males Sing Distinctly Different Songs in a Temperate Zone Songbird," Ardea 110(1), 99-105, (11 February 2022). https://doi.org/10.5253/arde.v110i1.a6
Received: 3 May 2022; Accepted: 22 November 2022; Published: 11 February 2022
KEYWORDS
acoustic structure
female song
Plain Laughingthrush
sexual selection
temperate zone
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