Deng, Zhuqing, Lloyd, Huw, Xia, Canwei, Li, Donglai and Zhang, Yanyun (2019) Within-season decline in the call consistency of individual male Common Cuckoo (Cuculus canorus). Journal of Ornithology, 160 (2). pp. 317-327. ISSN 2193-7192
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Abstract
Numerous studies have identified individually distinctive vocal characteristics and call consistency in different bird species. If these are to be utilised as non-invasive markers for monitoring purposes, then these vocal characteristics must remain stable over time. Three recent studies have shown that it is possible to identify individual male Common Cuckoo (Cuculus canorus) based on vocal characteristics but whether these are stable over the duration of a breeding season, remains unknown. We recorded 1032 syllables from 30 male Common Cuckoos in a Northeast Asian population. We colour-banded six of these males and made repeated recordings of their cu-coo advertisement call across a 19-day period of the breeding season in China. We used three methods to identify individuals: discriminant function analyses (DFA), correlation analysis (CA) and spectrographic cross-correlation (SPCC). We also used repeatability analysis to test whether call consistency (the number of syllables in each calling bout) was repeatable within individuals. Based on the same day recordings, calls from the same male were more similar in their characteristics than those of different males, and yielded correct rates of classifying individuals of 93.6% (SPCC), 90.8 % (DFA), and 71.5% (CA). However, these rates declined to 40.5% (SPCC), 40.7% (DFA) and 27% (CA) when using recordings over the 19-day period. Call consistency was repeatable within individuals across two successive calling bouts, but this individual repeatability disappeared when several (more than two) calling bouts from the same day or bouts from the different days were included in the analyses. Declines in the correct rate of identifying individual male cuckoos and call consistency in this study raises concerns that individual male cuckoo calls may be more variable than previously thought.
Impact and Reach
Statistics
Additional statistics for this dataset are available via IRStats2.