Journal article
Canadian field-naturalist, 2019
Professor
Faculty of Science
Thompson Rivers University
APA
Click to copy
LaZerte, S. E., Marini, K., Slabbekoorn, H., Reudink, M., & Otter, K. (2019). More Mountain Chickadees (Poecile gambeli) sing atypical songs in urban than in rural areas. Canadian Field-Naturalist.
Chicago/Turabian
Click to copy
LaZerte, S. E., K. Marini, H. Slabbekoorn, M. Reudink, and K. Otter. “More Mountain Chickadees (Poecile Gambeli) Sing Atypical Songs in Urban than in Rural Areas.” Canadian field-naturalist (2019).
MLA
Click to copy
LaZerte, S. E., et al. “More Mountain Chickadees (Poecile Gambeli) Sing Atypical Songs in Urban than in Rural Areas.” Canadian Field-Naturalist, 2019.
BibTeX Click to copy
@article{s2019a,
title = {More Mountain Chickadees (Poecile gambeli) sing atypical songs in urban than in rural areas},
year = {2019},
journal = {Canadian field-naturalist},
author = {LaZerte, S. E. and Marini, K. and Slabbekoorn, H. and Reudink, M. and Otter, K.}
}
Urbanization results in novel ecosystems with unique challenges. These may lead to problems during song learning or development and could result in the singing of atypical songs. During studies of Mountain Chickadees (Poecile gambeli) and urbanization in British Columbia, Canada, we observed males singing atypical songs along an urbanization gradient. We found that eight of 78 males consistently sang atypical songs and the odds of singing atypical songs increased with urbanization. We explored several explanations including habitat quality, population density, and bioacoustics. Future studies investigating causes and consequences of atypical singing will clarify effects of urbanization on Mountain Chickadees.