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Dryad

Data from: Black-capped chickadees (Poecile atricapillus) can identify individual females by their fee-bee songs

Cite this dataset

Montenegro, Carolina et al. (2021). Data from: Black-capped chickadees (Poecile atricapillus) can identify individual females by their fee-bee songs [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.fbg79cnrx

Abstract

Individual recognition is a social behavior that occurs in many bird species. A bird’s ability to discriminate among familiar and unfamiliar conspecifics is critical to avoid wasting resources such as time and energy during social interactions. Black-capped Chickadees are able to discriminate individual female and male chick-a-dee calls, potentially male and female tseet calls, and male fee-bee songs. In the current study, we used an operant discrimination go/no-go paradigm to determine whether female and male chickadees could discriminate between fee-bee songs produced by individual female chickadees as well as test which song component(s) enable this discrimination. Birds trained on natural categories—the songs of different females—learned to respond to rewarded stimuli more quickly than birds trained on random groupings of female songs and were able to transfer this learning to new songs from the same categories. Chickadees were also able to generalize their responding when exposed to the bee note of the fee-bee song of rewarded individuals; they did not generalize to fee notes. Our results provide evidence that Black-capped Chickadees can use female-produced fee-bee songs for individual recognition. However, the acoustic features underlying individual recognition require further investigation.

Methods

The dataset was collected through custom operant conditing programming outputs into excel files and then processed through SPSS.

Funding

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council, Award: Discovery Grant RGPIN 249884

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council, Award: Discovery Accelerator Supplement RGPAS 412311