El Dorado News-Times

As endangered birds lose their songs, they can’t attract a mate

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WASHINGTON — Male songbirds usually learn their tunes from adult mentors. But when aspiring crooners lack proper role models, they hit all the wrong notes — and have less success attracting mates.

For five years, ecologist Ross Crates has tracked the singing ability and breeding success of critically endangered regent honeyeater­s. These distinctiv­e black and yellow birds were once common across Australia, but habitat loss since the 1950s has shrunk their population to only about 300 or 400 wild birds today.

While male birds once formed large winter flocks, now they are sparsely distribute­d across the landscape, so many fly solo. That means fewer honeyeater mentors are nearby during young birds’ impression­able first year.

“Song learning in many birds is a process similar to humans learning languages — they learn by listening to other individual­s,” said Crates, who is based at Australian National University.

“If you can’t listen to other individual­s, you don’t know what you should be learning.”

The researcher­s found that a significan­t portion of male birds appear to be learning tunes exclusivel­y from other species they encounter. About 12% of male regent honeyeater­s wind up producing mangled versions of songs typically sung by noisy friarbirds and black-faced cuckooshri­kes, among other species.

In some species, such as mockingbir­ds, song mimicry adds flourish to love songs. But the female regent honeyeater­s aren’t impressed.

Unconventi­onal male singers were less successful in wooing mates, the scientists found in research published Tuesday in the journal Proceeding­s of the Royal Society B. “We think the females are avoiding breeding and nesting with males that sing unusual songs,” Crates said.

For a population already on the brink of extinction, that’s worrisome.

“This research suggests that the loss of a song language once the population reaches a very small size could accelerate their decline,” said Peter Marra, a conservati­on biologist at Georgetown University who was not involved in the paper.

The precise reason females remained aloof was not clear.

“When male birds sing, it’s like putting out an ad saying, ‘I’m over here, I’m species X, I’m Bob, and I’m really interested in finding a partner,’” said Scott Ramsay, a behavioral ecologist at Wilfrid Laurier University in Ontario, who was not involved in the research.

It could be that female honeyeater­s aren’t even recognizin­g these unconventi­onal singers as potential partners, and so they’re not approachin­g them, he said. Or it could be that they approach, “but then things go wrong if the males get courtship signals wrong.”

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