Degradation of rufous-and-white wren songs in a neotropical dry forest: effects of sex, song post height, and receiver height

Research output: Contribution to journalConference articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Degradation of rufous-and-white wren songs in a neotropical dry forest: effects of sex, song post height, and receiver height. / Barker, Nicole; Dabelsteen, Torben; Mennill, D.

In: Behaviour, No. pt. 8, 2009, p. 1093-1122.

Research output: Contribution to journalConference articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Barker, N, Dabelsteen, T & Mennill, D 2009, 'Degradation of rufous-and-white wren songs in a neotropical dry forest: effects of sex, song post height, and receiver height', Behaviour, no. pt. 8, pp. 1093-1122. https://doi.org/10.1163/156853909X406446

APA

Barker, N., Dabelsteen, T., & Mennill, D. (2009). Degradation of rufous-and-white wren songs in a neotropical dry forest: effects of sex, song post height, and receiver height. Behaviour, (pt. 8), 1093-1122. https://doi.org/10.1163/156853909X406446

Vancouver

Barker N, Dabelsteen T, Mennill D. Degradation of rufous-and-white wren songs in a neotropical dry forest: effects of sex, song post height, and receiver height. Behaviour. 2009;(pt. 8):1093-1122. https://doi.org/10.1163/156853909X406446

Author

Barker, Nicole ; Dabelsteen, Torben ; Mennill, D. / Degradation of rufous-and-white wren songs in a neotropical dry forest: effects of sex, song post height, and receiver height. In: Behaviour. 2009 ; No. pt. 8. pp. 1093-1122.

Bibtex

@inproceedings{877dd050f8ed11ddb219000ea68e967b,
title = "Degradation of rufous-and-white wren songs in a neotropical dry forest: effects of sex, song post height, and receiver height",
abstract = "Abstract: We performed a song transmission experiment to investigate the effects of distance, song post height, receiver perch height, signaller sex, and microhabitat on song degradation in rufous-and-white wrens (Thryothorus rufalbus), a neotropical duetting songbird. We quantified the effects of these factors on excess attenuation, signal-to-noise ratio, tail-to-signal ratio, and blur ratio of male and female songs. As expected, song degradation increased with distance between signaller and receiver. Songs transmitted best when emitted from moderate heights (5-7 m), although this pattern varied with receiver distance, receiver height and microhabitat. The patterns regarding receiver height were subtle and inconsistent, but receivers may maximise their ability to hear male and female songs when perched at a height of 7 m and 5 m, respectively. Female songs were generally more degraded than male songs. Rufous-and-white wren songs appeared more attenuated in open field than forest habitats, but microhabitat conditions within the forests exerted a strong influence on song degradation. These findings match previous studies showing an effect of distance, song post height, and habitat, but contrast with other research by showing a minimal effect of receiver perch height. This study represents the first detailed investigation of differences in song transmission between males and females.",
author = "Nicole Barker and Torben Dabelsteen and D. Mennill",
note = "LONG-RANGE COMMUNICATION; SOUND-TRANSMISSION; THRYOTHORUS-RUFALBUS; DUETTING BEHAVIOR; PROPAGATION; VOCALIZATIONS; BIRDS; REVERBERATIONS; TROGLODYTES; ADAPTATIONS; null ; Conference date: 09-08-2008 Through 15-08-2008",
year = "2009",
doi = "10.1163/156853909X406446",
language = "English",
pages = "1093--1122",
journal = "Behaviour",
issn = "0005-7959",
publisher = "Brill",
number = "pt. 8",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Degradation of rufous-and-white wren songs in a neotropical dry forest: effects of sex, song post height, and receiver height

AU - Barker, Nicole

AU - Dabelsteen, Torben

AU - Mennill, D.

N1 - LONG-RANGE COMMUNICATION; SOUND-TRANSMISSION; THRYOTHORUS-RUFALBUS; DUETTING BEHAVIOR; PROPAGATION; VOCALIZATIONS; BIRDS; REVERBERATIONS; TROGLODYTES; ADAPTATIONS

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - Abstract: We performed a song transmission experiment to investigate the effects of distance, song post height, receiver perch height, signaller sex, and microhabitat on song degradation in rufous-and-white wrens (Thryothorus rufalbus), a neotropical duetting songbird. We quantified the effects of these factors on excess attenuation, signal-to-noise ratio, tail-to-signal ratio, and blur ratio of male and female songs. As expected, song degradation increased with distance between signaller and receiver. Songs transmitted best when emitted from moderate heights (5-7 m), although this pattern varied with receiver distance, receiver height and microhabitat. The patterns regarding receiver height were subtle and inconsistent, but receivers may maximise their ability to hear male and female songs when perched at a height of 7 m and 5 m, respectively. Female songs were generally more degraded than male songs. Rufous-and-white wren songs appeared more attenuated in open field than forest habitats, but microhabitat conditions within the forests exerted a strong influence on song degradation. These findings match previous studies showing an effect of distance, song post height, and habitat, but contrast with other research by showing a minimal effect of receiver perch height. This study represents the first detailed investigation of differences in song transmission between males and females.

AB - Abstract: We performed a song transmission experiment to investigate the effects of distance, song post height, receiver perch height, signaller sex, and microhabitat on song degradation in rufous-and-white wrens (Thryothorus rufalbus), a neotropical duetting songbird. We quantified the effects of these factors on excess attenuation, signal-to-noise ratio, tail-to-signal ratio, and blur ratio of male and female songs. As expected, song degradation increased with distance between signaller and receiver. Songs transmitted best when emitted from moderate heights (5-7 m), although this pattern varied with receiver distance, receiver height and microhabitat. The patterns regarding receiver height were subtle and inconsistent, but receivers may maximise their ability to hear male and female songs when perched at a height of 7 m and 5 m, respectively. Female songs were generally more degraded than male songs. Rufous-and-white wren songs appeared more attenuated in open field than forest habitats, but microhabitat conditions within the forests exerted a strong influence on song degradation. These findings match previous studies showing an effect of distance, song post height, and habitat, but contrast with other research by showing a minimal effect of receiver perch height. This study represents the first detailed investigation of differences in song transmission between males and females.

U2 - 10.1163/156853909X406446

DO - 10.1163/156853909X406446

M3 - Conference article

SP - 1093

EP - 1122

JO - Behaviour

JF - Behaviour

SN - 0005-7959

IS - pt. 8

Y2 - 9 August 2008 through 15 August 2008

ER -

ID: 10482967