Male song sparrows modulate their aggressive signaling in response to plumage signals: experiments with 3-D printed models

2019 
Competitive interactions among conspecifics are often resolved by assessing signals that honestly indicate individual fighting ability or dominance. In territorial species, signals of competitive ability are thought to function primarily during the early stages of territory establishment, but recent evidence suggests that these signals continue to influence interactions with floaters and neighbors well after territory establishment. Here, we examine the influence of the extent of chest spotting displayed by an intruding male on the response of territorial male song sparrows. We exposed males to 3-D printed models with large or small spotting area coupled with conspecific playback and recorded their behavior. We also assessed the response of a subset of males to both the 3-D printed models and a traditional, taxidermic mount to ensure the 3-D models were a realistic stimulus. We found no differences in the number of attacks or proximity to the model due to spotting area. However, territorial males produced more soft songs and tended to sing fewer loud songs, both of which predict attack in our population, in response to the model with less chest spotting. One possibility is that males with less chest spotting elicit a stronger response because they are seen as a greater threat. Based on our previous findings in this system, we think it is more likely that models with less chest spotting are perceived as subordinate and therefore easier to defeat, leading to a stronger response by territory holders. We found males were equally likely to attack 3-D printed models and a taxidermic mount but signaled more aggressively during trials with the taxidermic mount than the 3-D printed models. This suggests that birds recognized the 3-D models as meaningful stimuli but that the use of 3-D printed models should be validated through comparison to a traditional taxidermic mount when possible.
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