Birdsong learning is mutually beneficial for tutee and tutor in song sparrows

Song learning is generally assumed to be beneficial for a young songbird, but merely incidental, without costs or benefits, for the older song ‘tutors’. In the present study we contrast two mutually exclusive hypotheses about the tutor/tutee relationship: (1) that it is cooperative, or at least mutu...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inAnimal behaviour Vol. 166; pp. 281 - 288
Main Authors Beecher, Michael D., Akçay, Çağlar, Campbell, S. Elizabeth
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 01.08.2020
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Summary:Song learning is generally assumed to be beneficial for a young songbird, but merely incidental, without costs or benefits, for the older song ‘tutors’. In the present study we contrast two mutually exclusive hypotheses about the tutor/tutee relationship: (1) that it is cooperative, or at least mutually tolerant, with tutor and tutee mutually benefiting from their relationship, versus (2) that it is competitive, with tutor and tutee competing over territory, so that one or the other suffers negative fitness consequences of their relationship. In a field study of three consecutive cohorts of song sparrows, Melospiza melodia morphna, we determined the older bird (primary tutor) from whom the young bird (tutee) learned most of his songs, and how long tutee and primary tutor survived subsequently. We found that the more songs a tutee learns from his primary tutor, the longer their mutual survival on their respective territories. While the number of songs they share predicts the mutual survival of tutor and tutee, it does not predict the independent survival of tutor or tutee, suggesting that the benefit each receives from song sharing exists only so long as both survive. •Song learning is generally assumed to benefit the tutee but not the tutor.•We investigate whether song learning is competitive or cooperative.•We determined from whom a young bird learned most of his songs.•We then determined how long the tutee and his tutor survived subsequently.•The more songs a tutee learns from his tutor, the longer they both survive.
ISSN:0003-3472
1095-8282
DOI:10.1016/j.anbehav.2020.05.015