Online ISSN: 2165-0586
Print ISSN: 0952-4622
Individual variation in the booming calls of captive Horned Guans (Oreophasis derbianus): an endangered Neotropical mountain bird
Abstract
The Horned Guan (
Oreophasis derbianus) is a cracid restricted to cloud
forests in the Sierra Madre of Chiapas in Mexico and the westerncentral
Mountains in Guatemala. It is an endangered species and
urgent conservation measures are required, such as non-invasive
monitoring techniques. Here, we study individual features in the boom
calls of Horned Guans.
... View full abstract
Boom calls are acoustic signals used by males
during courtship and territorial displays. This call is made of seven
notes, divided into two parts: an introductory section characterized
by low-amplitude notes and a body section characterized by highamplitude
notes. We recorded 10 males during the breeding seasons
of 2010 and 2011 in two captive populations and measured 22 acoustic
variables of the calls. We used a combination of statistical analyses to
test individuality in Horned Guan vocalizations. Our results showed
that time-related variables – but not frequency-related traits – varied
between individuals, and that individual calls showed no variation
between years. Our results suggest that Horned Guan individuals
can be distinguished using fine structural characteristics of their calls
and that calls remain stable across years. We argue that such vocal
signature could be used to track wild populations as a non-invasive
technique in order to improve census data in the short and long term.
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