A burst of song early
in the morning may help birds nail their songs during the day.
If you’ve ever been
woken up before sunrise by the trilling and chirping of birds outside your
window, you may have wondered: why do birds sing so loud, so early in the
morning?
Researchers at Duke
University say there may be a good reason why birds are most vocal at first
light. By singing early and often, a new study suggests,
birds perform better during the day.
The morning cacophony
is mostly males, whose songs are meant to impress potential mates and rivals.
“It’s like they’re
warming up backstage, before the sun comes up and the curtain rises,” said
co-author Stephen Nowicki,
a biology professor at Duke.
Scientists have proposed various hypotheses for why birds do their most vigorous singing in the early morning hours. One idea is that it’s the best time to broadcast, since there’s little wind to distort their sound. Others have suggested that the dim light makes it difficult to do much else, like hunt for insects.
But a study in
the journal Animal Behaviour points to another benefit: the early morning vocal
warm-up works wonders for their singing.
To test the “warm-up
hypothesis,” Nowicki and Duke biologist Susan Peters recorded
11 male swamp sparrows between 2 a.m. and noon for two to three mornings each.
The song of the swamp
sparrow is a simple trill of up to five notes, repeated around 5 to 10 times a
second. It sounds a bit “like a melodious police whistle,” Nowicki said.
Birdsong may look
effortless, but it requires balancing competing demands of speed and dexterity,
said first author Jason Dinh,
a biology Ph.D. student who did the study while still an undergraduate at Duke.
Birds switch from one
note to the next by opening and closing their beaks. To go from low to high and
back down again in rapid-fire succession, a bird must precisely coordinate the
movements of their beak and voice box with each breath.
To monitor the birds’
performance, the researchers measured each bird’s trill rate and vocal range
over the course of the morning.
For swamp sparrows,
the concert can start as early at 2:30 a.m. But they don’t wake up singing like
virtuosos, the study found.
Statistical analysis
of the recordings revealed that they start off taking it easy; singing slower,
or with a more limited range. They only start to nail their songs -- picking up
the tempo and reaching for higher and lower pitch -- just after dawn, after
hundreds of takes.
The more they warmed
up, the better they got. “They’re able to perform more difficult songs later in
the morning,” Dinh said.
While it’s hard to
make direct comparisons to the physiological effects in humans, Dinh said, the
warm-up up may help get their blood flowing and temperature rising to meet the
physical demands of singing.
Previous playback
experiments by this research team have shown that a well-sung song, compared to
a rusty one, is a bigger turn-on for females and more threatening to
eavesdropping males, Peters said.
If male swamp sparrows see improvements in their singing within hours, the researchers say, the next step is to find out if females take note. If so, then males that sing early and often may have an advantage in attracting a mate.
This research was
supported by the National Science Foundation (IBN-0315377).
CITATION: "Song Performance
Improves With Continued Singing Across the Morning in a Songbird,"
Jason P. Dinh, Susan Peters, Stephen Nowicki. Animal Behaviour, July 31, 2020.
DOI: 10.1016/j.anbehav.2020.06.018