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Original Articles

Vocal dialects in parrots: patterns and processes of cultural evolution

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Pages 50-66 | Received 30 Apr 2017, Accepted 05 Sep 2017, Published online: 12 Oct 2017
 

ABSTRACT

Vocal dialects have fascinated biologists for over 50 years. This mosaic pattern of geographic variation in learned vocalisations was first described in a songbird, and since that time most studies investigating dialects have focused on songbird species. Here we examine patterns of geographic variation in the calls of a different group of vocal learning birds, the parrots (order Psittaciformes). We summarise the growing literature on vocal variation in parrots, and complement this review with a survey of variation in the genus Amazona using calls from sound libraries. We find strikingly similar patterns to those previously found in songbirds. Over 90% of parrots examined in the literature, and 69% of Amazona species surveyed, showed geographic variation consistent with a propensity to share local call types. This trait is evolutionarily labile and widespread; within Amazona most clades contained species with and without geographic variation, and most major lineages of parrots include representatives with dialects. We found little support for the long-standing hypothesis that dialects isolate populations and thus generate genetic differences among populations. Instead, most studies support the idea that dialects are maintained by social benefits of matching local call types, a finding that has implications for the management of captive and endangered populations. Considerable scope remains for studies that experimentally test hypotheses for the exact nature of these benefits, as well as studies that employ comparisons among species, to understand how the interplay between ecology, social dynamics and vocal learning capacities produces different patterns of variation across the parrots.

Acknowledgements

We thank undergraduate researchers at the University of Pittsburgh at Johnstown, including Ellen Brady, Kaitlyn Eckley, Emma Gyurisin, and Gwendolyn Illar, for searching the parrot and songbird literature. We also thank the many ornithologists who have deposited their recordings in xeno-canto and the Macauley Library for publicly sharing these recordings.

Supplemental material

Supplemental data for this article can be accessed here.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by a grant from the National Institutes of Health [Grant 5SC1GM112582-06 to T.F.W.] and by the University of Pittsburgh under a CRDF Award [9011737 to C.R.D.].

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