Sex recognition in brown skuas: do acoustic signals matter?

Bird vocalisations are often essential for sex recognition, especially in species that show little morphological sex dimorphism. Brown skuas (Catharacta antarctica lonnbergi), which exhibit uniform plumage across both sexes, emit three main calls: the long call, the alarm call and the contact call....

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Main Authors: Janicke, Tim, Ritz, Markus, Hahn, Steffen, Peter, Hans-Ulrich
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://doc.rero.ch/record/311003/files/10336_2007_Article_195.pdf
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spelling ftreroch:oai:doc.rero.ch:311003 2023-05-15T14:05:09+02:00 Sex recognition in brown skuas: do acoustic signals matter? Janicke, Tim Ritz, Markus Hahn, Steffen Peter, Hans-Ulrich 2018-06-18T17:46:11Z http://doc.rero.ch/record/311003/files/10336_2007_Article_195.pdf eng eng http://doc.rero.ch/record/311003/files/10336_2007_Article_195.pdf 2018 ftreroch 2023-02-16T17:30:57Z Bird vocalisations are often essential for sex recognition, especially in species that show little morphological sex dimorphism. Brown skuas (Catharacta antarctica lonnbergi), which exhibit uniform plumage across both sexes, emit three main calls: the long call, the alarm call and the contact call. We tested the potential for sex recognition in brown skua calls of 42 genetically sexed individuals by analysing 8-12 acoustic parameters in the temporal and frequency domains of each call type. For every call type, we failed to find sex differences in any of the acoustic parameters measured. Stepwise discriminant function analysis (DFA) revealed that sexes cannot be unambiguously classified, with increasing uncertainty of correct classification from contact calls to long calls to alarm calls. Consequently, acoustic signalling is probably not the key mechanism for sex recognition in brown skuas Other/Unknown Material Antarc* Antarctica Brown Skua RERO DOC Digital Library
institution Open Polar
collection RERO DOC Digital Library
op_collection_id ftreroch
language English
description Bird vocalisations are often essential for sex recognition, especially in species that show little morphological sex dimorphism. Brown skuas (Catharacta antarctica lonnbergi), which exhibit uniform plumage across both sexes, emit three main calls: the long call, the alarm call and the contact call. We tested the potential for sex recognition in brown skua calls of 42 genetically sexed individuals by analysing 8-12 acoustic parameters in the temporal and frequency domains of each call type. For every call type, we failed to find sex differences in any of the acoustic parameters measured. Stepwise discriminant function analysis (DFA) revealed that sexes cannot be unambiguously classified, with increasing uncertainty of correct classification from contact calls to long calls to alarm calls. Consequently, acoustic signalling is probably not the key mechanism for sex recognition in brown skuas
author Janicke, Tim
Ritz, Markus
Hahn, Steffen
Peter, Hans-Ulrich
spellingShingle Janicke, Tim
Ritz, Markus
Hahn, Steffen
Peter, Hans-Ulrich
Sex recognition in brown skuas: do acoustic signals matter?
author_facet Janicke, Tim
Ritz, Markus
Hahn, Steffen
Peter, Hans-Ulrich
author_sort Janicke, Tim
title Sex recognition in brown skuas: do acoustic signals matter?
title_short Sex recognition in brown skuas: do acoustic signals matter?
title_full Sex recognition in brown skuas: do acoustic signals matter?
title_fullStr Sex recognition in brown skuas: do acoustic signals matter?
title_full_unstemmed Sex recognition in brown skuas: do acoustic signals matter?
title_sort sex recognition in brown skuas: do acoustic signals matter?
publishDate 2018
url http://doc.rero.ch/record/311003/files/10336_2007_Article_195.pdf
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
Brown Skua
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
Brown Skua
op_relation http://doc.rero.ch/record/311003/files/10336_2007_Article_195.pdf
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