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Acoustic manipulation by brood-parasitic honeyguide

Brood-parasitic birds lay their eggs in the nests of other species (‘hosts'), and their chicks encounter the challenge of acquiring sufficient food from host parents. Many parasitic chicks require more food than host chicks, and so need to elicit high rates of provisioning through their begging disp...

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Main Author: Blair, Cameron
Other Authors: Spottiswoode, Claire
Format: Thesis
Language:Eng
Published: Department of Biological Sciences 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Blair, Cameron
author2 Spottiswoode, Claire
author_browse Blair, Cameron
Spottiswoode, Claire
author_facet Spottiswoode, Claire
Blair, Cameron
author_sort Blair, Cameron
collection Thesis
description Brood-parasitic birds lay their eggs in the nests of other species (‘hosts'), and their chicks encounter the challenge of acquiring sufficient food from host parents. Many parasitic chicks require more food than host chicks, and so need to elicit high rates of provisioning through their begging displays. Greater (Indicator indicator) and lesser (I. minor) honeyguides are closely related brood parasites that require more food than host chicks, whom they kill soon after hatching. Previous research demonstrated that both species receive the same amount of food as an entire brood of hosts (little bee-eaters Merops pusillus and black-collared barbets Lybius torquatus respectively), and that their begging calls influence provisioning by host parents. However, the acoustic mechanisms facilitating this phenomenon remained unknown. In this dissertation, I first test whether greater and lesser honeyguides mimic the begging calls of their respective hosts and quantify the accuracy of acoustic mimicry. I then test the hypothesis that honeyguides elicit increased provisioning from host parents by mimicking an entire brood of host chicks. I found that while both honeyguides mimic their host's nestlings, they do not specifically replicate the sound of a brood rather than a single chick. Finally, I test the hypothesis that non-linear vocal phenomena (NLP) in honeyguide begging calls could facilitate a supernormal stimulus particularly when the pitch and temporal structure of begging calls is constrained (such as by selection for mimicry). NLP are known to indicate high-arousal states in other ecological settings, inspiring the hypothesis that elevated NLP could function to increase provisioning to parasitic chicks beyond levels individual host nestlings would receive. I found that greater honeyguides tended towards higher perceived roughness (a form of NLP) than single bee-eater nestlings, but not significantly so. Lesser honeyguide begging calls tended towards higher amplitude modulation frequencies and perceived roughness than single barbet nestlings, but this too was not significant. Since both these features are associated with the amplitude envelope, I conducted a playback experiment at black-collared barbet nests in the field in Zambia to test whether the shape of the amplitude envelope of honeyguide begging calls increases host provisioning. This cautiously suggested it did not, at least at the levels manipulated here. Together, these results show that honeyguides mimic the pitch and temporal structure of their primary hosts' begging calls but do not mimic a brood to increase host provisioning, contrary to previous suggestions. The results are inconclusive as to whether NLP could be exploited by honeyguides to increase host provisioning. NLP should be further examined as a potential signalling mechanism that could be exploited by brood parasites to elevate the level of provisioning by host parents. More generally, the signalling function of NLP in bird begging calls, which had not been examined prior to this dissertation, deserves further investigation.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language Eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:45.765Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher Department of Biological Sciences
publisherStr Department of Biological Sciences
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/41480 Acoustic manipulation by brood-parasitic honeyguide Blair, Cameron Spottiswoode, Claire Biological Sciences Brood-parasitic birds lay their eggs in the nests of other species (‘hosts'), and their chicks encounter the challenge of acquiring sufficient food from host parents. Many parasitic chicks require more food than host chicks, and so need to elicit high rates of provisioning through their begging displays. Greater (Indicator indicator) and lesser (I. minor) honeyguides are closely related brood parasites that require more food than host chicks, whom they kill soon after hatching. Previous research demonstrated that both species receive the same amount of food as an entire brood of hosts (little bee-eaters Merops pusillus and black-collared barbets Lybius torquatus respectively), and that their begging calls influence provisioning by host parents. However, the acoustic mechanisms facilitating this phenomenon remained unknown. In this dissertation, I first test whether greater and lesser honeyguides mimic the begging calls of their respective hosts and quantify the accuracy of acoustic mimicry. I then test the hypothesis that honeyguides elicit increased provisioning from host parents by mimicking an entire brood of host chicks. I found that while both honeyguides mimic their host's nestlings, they do not specifically replicate the sound of a brood rather than a single chick. Finally, I test the hypothesis that non-linear vocal phenomena (NLP) in honeyguide begging calls could facilitate a supernormal stimulus particularly when the pitch and temporal structure of begging calls is constrained (such as by selection for mimicry). NLP are known to indicate high-arousal states in other ecological settings, inspiring the hypothesis that elevated NLP could function to increase provisioning to parasitic chicks beyond levels individual host nestlings would receive. I found that greater honeyguides tended towards higher perceived roughness (a form of NLP) than single bee-eater nestlings, but not significantly so. Lesser honeyguide begging calls tended towards higher amplitude modulation frequencies and perceived roughness than single barbet nestlings, but this too was not significant. Since both these features are associated with the amplitude envelope, I conducted a playback experiment at black-collared barbet nests in the field in Zambia to test whether the shape of the amplitude envelope of honeyguide begging calls increases host provisioning. This cautiously suggested it did not, at least at the levels manipulated here. Together, these results show that honeyguides mimic the pitch and temporal structure of their primary hosts' begging calls but do not mimic a brood to increase host provisioning, contrary to previous suggestions. The results are inconclusive as to whether NLP could be exploited by honeyguides to increase host provisioning. NLP should be further examined as a potential signalling mechanism that could be exploited by brood parasites to elevate the level of provisioning by host parents. More generally, the signalling function of NLP in bird begging calls, which had not been examined prior to this dissertation, deserves further investigation. 2025-06-25T11:40:02Z 2025-06-25T11:40:02Z 2025 2025-06-25T11:38:31Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41480 Eng application/pdf Department of Biological Sciences Faculty of Science University of Cape town
spellingShingle Biological Sciences
Blair, Cameron
Acoustic manipulation by brood-parasitic honeyguide
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Acoustic manipulation by brood-parasitic honeyguide
title_full Acoustic manipulation by brood-parasitic honeyguide
title_fullStr Acoustic manipulation by brood-parasitic honeyguide
title_full_unstemmed Acoustic manipulation by brood-parasitic honeyguide
title_short Acoustic manipulation by brood-parasitic honeyguide
title_sort acoustic manipulation by brood parasitic honeyguide
topic Biological Sciences
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41480
work_keys_str_mv AT blaircameron acousticmanipulationbybroodparasitichoneyguide