As a textbook example of a sexually selected trait, song in male birds has been extensively examined in the context of female mate choice and male-male competition for access to mates. Female song is also phylogenetically widespread, and probably ancestral. However, we know relatively little about when and why females sing. Female song may be important for female-male communication, e.g. fertility advertisement, mate attraction or coordinating the care of young. Alternatively, female song may function in the context of female-female competition for reproductive resources, e.g. nest sites, year-round territories or parental assistance. We quantified spontaneous song, and song in response to playback of an unfamiliar female song, in female an...
In species with mutual mate choice, we should expect adaptive signaling in both sexes. However, the ...
The study of song development has focused on temperate zone birds in which typically only males sing...
In species with mutual mate choice, we should expect adaptive signaling in both sexes. However, the ...
Historically, bird song complexity was thought to evolve primarily through sexual selection on males...
Historically, bird song complexity was thought to evolve primarily through sexual selection on males...
Functional explanations of the dawn chorus in birds remain elusive. One hypothesis suggests that thi...
Bird song is well studied in males as a sexually selected behavior. However, although song is also c...
Functional explanations of the dawn chorus in birds remain elusive. One hypothesis suggests that thi...
Female song is an ancestral trait in songbirds, yet extant females generally sing less than males. H...
The widely accepted functions of complex bird song - to defend a territory or attract a mate, or bot...
Historically, bird song has been regarded as a sex-specific signalling trait; males sing to attract ...
In the Pyrenees, alpine accentors bred in polygynandrous groups of up to four males and four females...
Bird song, traditionally regarded as primarily a male trait, is in fact widespread among female song...
While birdsong is a model system for animal communication studies, our knowledge is derived primaril...
In species with mutual mate choice, we should expect adaptive signaling in both sexes. However, the ...
In species with mutual mate choice, we should expect adaptive signaling in both sexes. However, the ...
The study of song development has focused on temperate zone birds in which typically only males sing...
In species with mutual mate choice, we should expect adaptive signaling in both sexes. However, the ...
Historically, bird song complexity was thought to evolve primarily through sexual selection on males...
Historically, bird song complexity was thought to evolve primarily through sexual selection on males...
Functional explanations of the dawn chorus in birds remain elusive. One hypothesis suggests that thi...
Bird song is well studied in males as a sexually selected behavior. However, although song is also c...
Functional explanations of the dawn chorus in birds remain elusive. One hypothesis suggests that thi...
Female song is an ancestral trait in songbirds, yet extant females generally sing less than males. H...
The widely accepted functions of complex bird song - to defend a territory or attract a mate, or bot...
Historically, bird song has been regarded as a sex-specific signalling trait; males sing to attract ...
In the Pyrenees, alpine accentors bred in polygynandrous groups of up to four males and four females...
Bird song, traditionally regarded as primarily a male trait, is in fact widespread among female song...
While birdsong is a model system for animal communication studies, our knowledge is derived primaril...
In species with mutual mate choice, we should expect adaptive signaling in both sexes. However, the ...
In species with mutual mate choice, we should expect adaptive signaling in both sexes. However, the ...
The study of song development has focused on temperate zone birds in which typically only males sing...
In species with mutual mate choice, we should expect adaptive signaling in both sexes. However, the ...