[TN-Bird] Nutatches listen to chickadees

  • From: Andy Jones <ajones@xxxxxxxx>
  • To: tn-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Tue, 20 Mar 2007 11:35:21 -0400

TN-Birders -

I read a paper a few years ago about chickadees varying their 
"chick-a-dee-dee" scold based on the perceived threat of whomever they 
are scolding, and I thought that it was a tremendous article.  This has 
recently been augmented by a study of nuthatches, who also seem to 
understand the chickadee language.  Here's a take on this article from 
the popular press:

Nuthatches Understand Chickadee Calls
Randolph E. Schmid, Associated Press


March 20, 2007 — Nuthatches appear to have learned to understand a 
foreign language — chickadee. It's not unusual for one animal to react 
to the alarm call of another, but nuthatches seem to go beyond that — 
interpreting the type of alarm and what sort of predator poses a threat. 
When a chickadee sees a predator, it issues warning call — a soft "seet" 
for a flying hawk, owl or falcon, or a loud "chick-a-dee-dee-dee" for a 
perched predator.

The "chick-a-dee" call can have 10 to 15 "dees" at the end and varies in 
sound to encode information on the type of predator. It also calls in 
other small birds to mob the predator, Christopher Templeton of the 
University of Washington said in a telephone interview.

"In this case the nuthatch is able to discriminate the information in 
this call," said Templeton, a doctoral candidate.

The findings by Templeton and Erick Green, an associate professor of 
biological sciences at the University of Montana, are reported in this 
week's online edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Templeton had been studying chickadees and noticed their varying 
response to different alarm calls so he recorded them and watched the 
responses.

He found the songbirds warned of greater danger from small, agile 
raptors such as the pygmy owl rather than something larger and less 
maneuverable, like the great horned owl.

Since chickadees and nuthatches live in many of the same areas and are 
similar in size, he decided to see how the nuthatches reacted to 
chickadee warnings.

He placed speakers at the base of trees where nuthatches were present, 
but where there were no live chickadees, so their actions wouldn't tip 
off the nuthatches.

When the recorded warning calls were played, he reports, the nuthatches 
reacted appropriately.

The nuthatches formed into mobs, flicking their wings and swirling 
around the speakers when the warning was for small predators than for 
larger ones.

Mobbing is a defensive behavior, Templeton said, when large groups of 
small birds pester a predator.

"They're not enough to kill you or hurt you, but they are enough to make 
you want to go and sit somewhere else," he said.

"Mobbing seems to be a way of teaching birds which predators are 
dangerous. But we have no idea how nuthatches learn to interpret the 
chickadee calls," he said.

But, he added, it appears to be learned behavior because the mobbing 
calls of the two songbird species are very different.

So, does it work the other way? Do chickadees understand the warning 
calls of nuthatches?
"It wouldn't surprise me, but no one's looked to see if nuthatches have 
a similar amount of information in their call. Perhaps that's a project 
I should do," he said.

Charles Eldermire of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology called the finding 
"another interesting example of interspecific communication brought to 
light."

However, he said, "There is no way to tell if they are responding to 
'encoded' information, or simply to intensity of the call."

"My main criticism hinges on the fact that they tested two categories of 
very different sounding calls, one of which averages twice the number of 
D notes than the other," he said.

"In many ways, I would consider these two calls as distinct, and that, 
it would seem, might be where the argument of importance gets a little 
murky," said Eldermire, who was not part of the research team.

Andre Dhondt, a professor of ornithology at Cornell, noted that "birds 
in general respond to each other's alarm calls."

Also, said Dhondt, who was not part of Templeton's research team, 
black-capped chickadees have been known to produce false alarm calls, 
causing other birds to fly away, leaving the cheating chickadees to 
enjoy a food source by itself.

-- 
Andy Jones, Ph.D.
William A. and Nancy R. Klamm Endowed Chair of Ornithology
and Head of Department of Ornithology
Cleveland Museum of Natural History
1 Wade Oval Drive, University Circle
Cleveland, OH 44106
http://www.cmnh.org/site/researchandcollections_Ornithology.aspx
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