Abstract
In long-range fission-fusion complex societies, individuals are often recognized by audiovocal signals because of long-range propagation. The signature voice system is a well-known mechanism involving both acoustic individuality of a certain call type and discrimination ability. Previous studies on vocal individual recognition of birds have emphasized its involvement in breeding contexts such as mate, parent and offspring, and territorial-neighbour recognition. However, there has been less focus on the recognition of non-breeding flock members despite the socio-ecological demand of such ability in the complex social lives of highly social birds including corvids. Here we report a signature voice system in jungle crows by showing both acoustic individuality of contact calls and discrimination ability. We first performed a discriminant functional analysis on contact ka calls of five crows to examine their discriminatory potential and demonstrate inter-individual distinctions. We next used an operant conditioning to verify the perceptual ability to discriminate non-breeding familiar conspecifics based on ka calls. Four of the five crows successfully transferred discrimination of individual calls to the novel ka calls. Our results provide the first evidence of a signature voice system as a perceptual mechanism for individual recognition of familiar individuals in non-breeding flocks of a highly social crow. © 2010 Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Kondo, N., Izawa, E. I., & Watanabe, S. (2010). Perceptual mechanism for vocal individual recognition in jungle crows (Corvus macrorhynchos): Contact call signature and discrimination. Behaviour, 147(8), 1051–1072. https://doi.org/10.1163/000579510X505427
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.