SummarySignal evolution in social animals has produced a wide variety of communal displays, many of them remarkable feats of complex coordination [1–4]. The two main explanations for this temporal precision are: (1) it evolves as a cooperative signal of coalition quality [5] or (2) it minimizes signal jamming (i.e., interference of one signal by another) [6]. However, support for the first hypothesis is inconclusive, and the role of jamming in communal signaling strategies remains unknown. Here, we use playback experiments to examine how social context influences the structure of duets in a pair-living antbird (Hypocnemis peruviana). The results show that, although resident pairs produced coordinated duets when responding to rival pairs, co...
Animals communicate with their whole bodies, so their signals can be complex and multimodal. The joi...
Many organisms coordinate rhythmic motor actions with those of a partner to generate cooperative soc...
Duets in breeding pairs may reflect a situation of conflict, whereby an individual answers its partn...
Coordinated displays are widely used to defend shared resources, and may signal coalition strength s...
Communal signaling—wherein males and females collaborate to produce joint visual or acoustic display...
Collective signalling in animals has fascinated biologists for a long time. A recent study on Austra...
Despite the widespread occurrence of avian duets, their adaptive significance is poorly understood. ...
Background: Duet function hypotheses have been mostly studied in bird species that produce duets wit...
Duetting behaviour is a unique form of animal communication that occurs in many diverse taxa in the ...
Many group-living animals cooperatively signal to defend resources, but what stops deceptive signall...
Sherpa Romeo green journal. Open access article. Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY) applie...
Animals communicate with their whole bodies, so their signals can be complex and multimodal. The joi...
SummaryIn many tropical animals, male and female breeding partners combine their songs to produce vo...
Animals that live in communication range of multiple conspecific receivers have the potential to int...
In some species of songbirds, both females and males sing and coordinate their vocalizations to cr...
Animals communicate with their whole bodies, so their signals can be complex and multimodal. The joi...
Many organisms coordinate rhythmic motor actions with those of a partner to generate cooperative soc...
Duets in breeding pairs may reflect a situation of conflict, whereby an individual answers its partn...
Coordinated displays are widely used to defend shared resources, and may signal coalition strength s...
Communal signaling—wherein males and females collaborate to produce joint visual or acoustic display...
Collective signalling in animals has fascinated biologists for a long time. A recent study on Austra...
Despite the widespread occurrence of avian duets, their adaptive significance is poorly understood. ...
Background: Duet function hypotheses have been mostly studied in bird species that produce duets wit...
Duetting behaviour is a unique form of animal communication that occurs in many diverse taxa in the ...
Many group-living animals cooperatively signal to defend resources, but what stops deceptive signall...
Sherpa Romeo green journal. Open access article. Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY) applie...
Animals communicate with their whole bodies, so their signals can be complex and multimodal. The joi...
SummaryIn many tropical animals, male and female breeding partners combine their songs to produce vo...
Animals that live in communication range of multiple conspecific receivers have the potential to int...
In some species of songbirds, both females and males sing and coordinate their vocalizations to cr...
Animals communicate with their whole bodies, so their signals can be complex and multimodal. The joi...
Many organisms coordinate rhythmic motor actions with those of a partner to generate cooperative soc...
Duets in breeding pairs may reflect a situation of conflict, whereby an individual answers its partn...