PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Birds on repeat: Do playbacks hurt fowl?

Princeton study shows that playing bird recordings could zap birds' energy

2013-10-16
(Press-News.org) PRINCETON, NJ—In the forests of Ecuador, plain-tailed wrens nest in bamboo thickets, singing complex and continuous melodies. Residing nearby are rufous antpittas, small, secretive birds that hop like thrushes and whistle in mossy forests. Together, their songs fill parts of the South American Andes.

Birdwatchers often seek out rare and beautiful birds like the wren and antpitta using "playbacks" – or recordings of bird songs – to draw such them out from their hideaways. But does such babbling-on-repeat harm the birds?

Using the emphatic sounds of both bird species, a Princeton University researcher has – for the first time in peer-reviewed research – examined the effects of birdwatchers' "playbacks" in the wild. In PLOS One, he shows that playbacks do have potentially negative consequences, especially in terms of birds' energies.

"Playbacks would be harmful if a species becomes stressed, expends energy, or takes time away from other activities to respond to these recordings," said J. Berton C. Harris, a postdoctoral fellow studying under Professor David Wilcove from the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs' Program in Science, Technology and Environmental Policy.

Working in a southern Ecuadorian biological reserve, Harris studied the effects of both single and repeated playbacks on wrens and antpittas. In his first trial, he introduced single playbacks to 24 groups of wrens and 12 groups of antpittas. Along with David Haskell from the University of the South in Tennessee, Harris monitored both bird species for one hour after playing a five-minute, self-recorded song.

Harris' results show that, after the single playbacks, both wrens and antpittas sang more often. Both species also tended to repeat these songs more often after listening to the playbacks. This could be harmful to the birds, Harris said, if it zaps them of too much energy.

"Birds could be wasting their time and energy by responding to non-existent intruders. When male birds respond to birdwatchers' playbacks to defend their territories, they may spend less time caring for their nestlings, experience higher levels of stress hormones or be subject to a romantic coup from other males while away from their mates."

In the second part of the study, Harris and Haskell monitored the effects of daily playback on groups of plain-tailed wrens. Like the first experiment, he played the birds' song once for five minutes, recording the birds' responses for one hour. This was done daily for two-and-a-half weeks.

Although the vocal response was strong for the first 12 days, the wrens eventually habituated and stopped responding – suggesting that playbacks have minimal effects on wrens. One group of wrens, seemingly uninterested, even built a nest near a playback site. Harris says this behavior should nudge scientists to consider birdwatching activity when selecting research sites so that results aren't biased.

"Birdwatchers are ardent conservationists, and they want to minimize their impact while observing secretive birds," Harris said. "They promote environmental conservation by funding ecotourism infrastructure, especially in developing countries, where tourism can provide local people alternatives to habitat exploitation. Unfortunately, as evidenced by this research, birdwatchers may also have negative effects on ecosystems."

Harris suggests that future studies be conducted in order to better understand how playbacks may affect other aspects of a bird's life.

"Studies of the effects of playback on bird reproductive success have not yet been done. And until such studies are available, it'd be wise for birdwatchers to be cautious of the negative effects. For example, it might make sense to minimize the use of playback with endangered species or in areas that host a lot of birdwatchers."



INFORMATION:

The paper, "Simulated Birdwatchers' Playback Affects the Behavior of Two Tropical Birds," was first published online Oct. 11 in PLOS One. This research was supported by the Jocotoco Conservation Foundation in Ecuador.

For more information about the Woodrow Wilson School's STEP program, click here.

Founded in 1930, the Woodrow Wilson School at Princeton University is a major international center of advanced training and research in public affairs. The Woodrow Wilson School is an institution with the energy and strength to tackle the most serious issues of the present day, and the vision and experience to prepare the leaders who will shape the public policies of the future.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Mayo Clinic psychiatrist: Taking guns away from mentally ill won't eliminate mass shootings

2013-10-16
ROCHESTER, Minn. — A string of public mass shootings during the past decade-plus have rocked America leaving policymakers and mental health experts alike fishing for solutions to prevent these heinous crimes. A Mayo Clinic physician, however, argues that at least one proposal won't stop the public massacres: restricting gun access to the mentally ill. J. Michael Bostwick, M.D., a Mayo Clinic psychiatrist and author of the editorial published online in Mayo Clinic Proceedings today, argues several points including that mass shootings are carefully planned — often spanning ...

Carbon cycle models underestimate indirect role of animals

2013-10-16
Animal populations can have a far more significant impact on carbon storage and exchange in regional ecosystems than is typically recognized by global carbon models, according to a new paper authored by researchers at the Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies (F&ES). In fact, in some regions the magnitude of carbon uptake or release due to the effects of specific animal species or groups of animals — such as the pine beetles devouring forests in western North America — can rival the impact of fossil fuel emissions for the same region, according to the paper ...

Geoscience Workforce Currents #79

2013-10-16
Alexandria, VA –The majority of bachelor's and doctoral graduates did not participate in an internship experience during their postsecondary career, whereas the majority of master's graduates did have at least one internship experience. Most of those bachelor's, master's and doctoral students that held an internship considered their internship experiences to be "very important". Of these master's candidates, 48% were employed within the geosciences at a company they had previously interned at the time. ### For the complete Geoscience Currents #79 please go to: http://bit.ly/17JXlLe. ...

Wari, predecessors of the Inca, used restraint to reshape human landscape

2013-10-16
The Wari, a complex civilization that preceded the Inca empire in pre-Columbia America, didn't rule solely by pillage, plunder and iron-fisted bureaucracy, a Dartmouth study finds. Instead, they started out by creating loosely administered colonies to expand trade, provide land for settlers and tap natural resources across much of the central Andes. The results, which appear in the Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, shed new light on how early states evolved into empires in the region that became the Inca imperial heartland. A PDF of the study is available on request. The ...

Tracking viral DNA in the cell

2013-10-16
The medical, humanitarian and economical impact of viral diseases is devastating to humans and livestock. There are no adequate therapies available against most viral diseases, largely because the mechanisms by which viruses infect cells are poorly known. An interdisciplinary team of researchers from the University of Zurich headed by cell biologist Prof. Urs Greber now presents a method that can be used to display viral DNA in host cells at single-molecule resolution. The method gives unexpected insights into the distribution of viral DNA in cells, and the reaction of ...

Finding blood clots before they wreak havoc

2013-10-16
CAMBRIDGE, Mass-- Life-threatening blood clots can form in anyone who sits on a plane for a long time, is confined to bed while recovering from surgery, or takes certain medications. There is no fast and easy way to diagnose these clots, which often remain undetected until they break free and cause a stroke or heart attack. However, new technology from MIT may soon change that: A team of engineers has developed a way to detect blood clots using a simple urine test. The noninvasive diagnostic, described in a recent issue of the journal ACS Nano, relies on nanoparticles ...

When neurons have less to say, they speak up

2013-10-16
This news release is available in German. The brain is an extremely adaptable organ – but it is also quite conservative. That's in short, what scientists from the Max Planck Institute of Neurobiology in Martinsried and their colleagues from the Friedrich Miescher Institute in Basel and the Ruhr-Universität Bochum were now able to show. The researchers found that neurons in the brain regulate their own activity in such a way that the overall activity level in the network remains as constant as possible. This remains true even in the event of major changes: After the ...

Taking stock of research on sleepless soldiers

2013-10-16
Various behavioral treatment options are helping to treat the sleeplessness experienced by one in every two American soldiers who have been deployed in recent military operations. So says Dr. Adam Bramoweth of the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Pittsburgh Healthcare System, and Dr. Anne Germain of the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine in the US. This review of research on deployment-related insomnia among military personnel and veterans, conducted since 2010, is published in Springer's journal Current Psychiatry Reports. Insomnia is reported by up to 54 ...

New survey tools unveil 2 celestial explosions

2013-10-16
Pasadena, CA—A team of researchers including Carnegie's Mansi Kasliwal and John Mulchaey used a novel astronomical survey software system—the intermediate Palomar Transient Factory (iPTF)—to link a new stripped-envelope supernova, named iPTF13bvn, to the star from which it exploded. The iPTF team also pinpointed the first afterglow of an explosion called a gamma-ray burst that was found by the Fermi satellite. Their work will be published by The Astrophysical Journal Letters in two papers led by Yi Cao and Leo Singer, both of the California Institute of Technology. Their ...

Participation in cardiac rehab program can result in gains for recovery in stroke patients

2013-10-16
Montreal — Stroke patients who participate in a cardiac rehabilitation program for six months make rapid gains in how far and fast they can walk, the use of weakened limbs and their ability to sit and stand, according to a study presented today at the Canadian Stroke Congress. On average, participants saw a 21-per-cent improvement in the strength and range of motion of weakened limbs; a 19-per-cent improvement in walking speed; and a 16-per-cent improvement in the distance they could walk. "There should be a seamless referral of patients with mild to moderate effects ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Revolutionary lubricant prevents friction at high temperatures

Do women talk more than men? It might depend on their age

The right kind of fusion neutrons

The cost of preventing extinction of Australia’s priority species

JMIR Publications announces new CEO

NCSA awards 17 students Fiddler Innovation Fellowships

How prenatal alcohol exposure affects behavior into adulthood

Does the neuron know the electrode is there?

Vilcek Foundation celebrates immigrant scientists with $250,000 in prizes

Age and sex differences in efficacy of treatments for type 2 diabetes

Octopuses have some of the oldest known sex chromosomes

High-yield rice breed emits up to 70% less methane

Long COVID prevalence and associated activity limitation in US children

Intersection of race and rurality with health care–associated infections and subsequent outcomes

Risk of attempted and completed suicide in persons diagnosed with headache

Adolescent smartphone use during school hours

Alarming rise in rates of advanced prostate cancer in California

Nearly half of adults mistakenly think benefits of daily aspirin outweigh risks

Cardiovascular disease medications underused globally

Amazon Pharmacy's RxPass program improves medication adherence, helps prime members save money, study finds

Tufts University School of Medicine, ATI Physical Therapy launch first-of-its-kind collaboration to make physical therapy education and career advancement more accessible and affordable

Could lycopene—a plant extract—be an effective antidepressant?

Study shows urine test for prostate cancer could be used at home

Shaping future of displays: clay/europium-based technology offers dual-mode versatility

Optimizing ADHD treatment: revealing key components of cognitive–behavioral therapy

Breaking barriers in thioxanthone synthesis: a double aryne insertion strategy

Houston Methodist researchers identify inhibitor drugs to treat aggressive breast cancer

Skin disease patients show response to targeted treatment

Tiny copper ‘flowers’ bloom on artificial leaves for clean fuel production

Cracks in Greenland Ice Sheet grow more rapidly in response to climate change

[Press-News.org] Birds on repeat: Do playbacks hurt fowl?
Princeton study shows that playing bird recordings could zap birds' energy