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Birds alter songs to be heard over increased ambient noise: study

Real-time modifications has been observed in five different avian species
Birds 'shout' to be heard over the noise produced by human activity such as traffic, scientists have found. Researchers led by an expert from the University of Exeter looked at how bluebirds altered their songs in response to increases in nearby background noise caused, in many cases, by human activities such as traffic. They found that the birds altered their songs immediately after noise levels intensified, making 'real-time' adjustments in order to produce songs that are both louder and lower-pitched.
The results suggest that birds are able to perceive increases in noise and respond accordingly - not unlike humans do when in raucous settings. Dr Caitlin Kight, a behavioural ecologist based at the University of Exeter's Penryn Campus in Cornwall, who led the study said that the research could help improve our understanding of environmental constraints on animal communication, as well as enhance our awareness of what sorts of human modifications can impact animals, and how we might be able to reduce any negative effects of these disturbances.
"Although many manmade noise regimes are often very different from those found in nature, there can be surprising similarities in certain features, including volume, pitch, or timing," Kight said. "Sounds caused by traffic, for example, may not be hugely different from those produced by waterfalls or heavy winds. "Animals that evolved in habitats with those natural features may therefore already have, within their existing repertoires of behaviours, the flexibility to respond to noise pollution. This certainly seems to be the case with bluebirds," she added.
Although it has previously been shown that birds in noisier areas tend to sing differently than those in quieter surrounds, it was not immediately clear whether birds were able to make vocal adjustments in real time - that is, an immediate shift in response to increased noise made by a passing car, for example.
Real-time modifications have now been observed in five different avian species. The current study is the first to describe this behaviour in a member of the thrush family. Kight recorded songs produced by 32 male bluebirds, and analysed two from each male - those produced during the quietest and loudest period of ambient noise - to investigate whether males changes their songs between these two conditions.
She found that, as background noise increased, male bluebirds produced songs that were louder and lower-pitched. This suggests that the birds are able to both perceive and respond to increases in noise. This enabled them to produce songs that were more likely to be heard by potential mates or rivals. The study was published in the journal Integrative and Comparative Biology.
( Source : PTI )
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