Understanding the causes and consequences of divergence in mate recognition traits has long been a fundamental question in evolutionary biology. In songbirds, songs are culturally transmitted, and cultural divergence can generate discrete geographic variation in song (i.e., dialects). Understanding how responses to within- versus across-species variation in songs changes across life stages may shed light on the functional significance of population divergence in learned traits. Here, we use a novel combination of song playbacks to adult and nestling golden-crowned sparrows to compare responses to local conspecific, foreign conspecific and heterospecific songs prior to and after song learning. We found that nestlings respond equally little t...
In addition to the observed high diversity of species in the tropics, divergence among populations o...
Discrete geographic variation, or dialects, in songs of songbirds arise as a consequence of complex ...
Plasticity is often thought to accelerate trait evolution and speciation. For example, plasticity in...
Understanding the causes and consequences of divergence in mate recognition traits has long been a f...
Learned behavior has long fascinated biologists due to its ability to decouple traits and genes, pot...
Songs play an important role in premating isolation in birds. However, when songs are learned, expe-...
Divergence in sexual signals may drive reproductive isolation between lineages, but behavioral barri...
Oscine birds preferentially respond to certain sounds over others from an early age, which focuses s...
Repertoire matching occurs when one songbird replies to another with a song type that the two birds ...
Oscine songbirds are an ideal system for investigating how early experience affects vocal behavior. ...
Animal vocalizations vary greatly between and within species. Male oscines acquire song by imitatio...
Cultural evolution can result in changes in the prevalence not only of different learned song types ...
One hypothesis explaining the species richness of the songbirds is based on the fact that these spec...
A fundamental hypothesis about vocal learning is that young animals learn vocalizations in their nat...
In addition to the observed high diversity of species in the tropics, divergence among populations o...
Discrete geographic variation, or dialects, in songs of songbirds arise as a consequence of complex ...
Plasticity is often thought to accelerate trait evolution and speciation. For example, plasticity in...
Understanding the causes and consequences of divergence in mate recognition traits has long been a f...
Learned behavior has long fascinated biologists due to its ability to decouple traits and genes, pot...
Songs play an important role in premating isolation in birds. However, when songs are learned, expe-...
Divergence in sexual signals may drive reproductive isolation between lineages, but behavioral barri...
Oscine birds preferentially respond to certain sounds over others from an early age, which focuses s...
Repertoire matching occurs when one songbird replies to another with a song type that the two birds ...
Oscine songbirds are an ideal system for investigating how early experience affects vocal behavior. ...
Animal vocalizations vary greatly between and within species. Male oscines acquire song by imitatio...
Cultural evolution can result in changes in the prevalence not only of different learned song types ...
One hypothesis explaining the species richness of the songbirds is based on the fact that these spec...
A fundamental hypothesis about vocal learning is that young animals learn vocalizations in their nat...
In addition to the observed high diversity of species in the tropics, divergence among populations o...
Discrete geographic variation, or dialects, in songs of songbirds arise as a consequence of complex ...
Plasticity is often thought to accelerate trait evolution and speciation. For example, plasticity in...