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The Best Science Writing Online 2012
Showcasing more than fifty of the most provocative, original, and significant online essays from 2011, The Best Science Writing Online 2012 will change the way...
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Did you know birds sing in dialect? They do. The song of a great tit from the countryside is a far cry from that of his city cousin. And some song dialects can change nearly as fast as human slang—the Indigo Bunting changes tune from year to year.
To investigate the cultural evolution of such songs researchers have recently completed a study of adjacent White-crowned sparrow dialects from 1969 to 1998 in San Francisco. Biologist David Luther of the University of Maryland and ornithologist Luis Baptista of the California Academy of Sciences hypothesized that the pressures of urban noise would tend, over time, to eliminate the lower ranges of the bird's song and cause the sparrows to prefer to learn songs at the higher range. Simply put, birds that sang too low would be drowned out by rumbling buses, honking cars, or other typical city noises.
And that's exactly what they found.
The lowest frequencies of bird song in the Summer of Love were lower than those to be found during the Dotcom craze. And since sparrows are relatively short-lived—average lifespan of just two years—this effect spanned generations. Much like humans, the sparrows seem to be raising their voices to be heard over the sounds of the city.
At least one birdsong dialect died out entirely, though there were some bilingual birds, and the so-called San Francisco dialect came to dominate all songs, likely because it was tuned higher.
It seems that the need for effective communication in the local environment is the fundamental driver of cultural traits that are passed on from one generation to the next. Ya hear that?!



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4 Comments
Add CommentI have come to refer to boat-tail grackles as "car alarm" birds. The ones that spend a lot of time near shopping malls seem to make this sound while those that are elsewhere don't.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisJust a couple of weeks ago there was an almost identical piece on NPR - only it was frogs in Australia changing their calls in response to urban noise.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thishttp://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=113717563
Our outreach to the bird will seems to me to be quite puny. seemingly all that we are interested in is differentiating one specie from another, a city bird from a county bird, where as they have a communication repertoire that extends to many aspects of community living. I am humbled when I think of how narrow is the range of my understanding of the natural world.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisIn NYC, the mockingbirds learned to sound like car alarms. It used to crack me up!
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