The effect of social structure on vocal flexibility in monk parakeets

dc.contributor.author Smeele, Simeon Q. ca
dc.contributor.author Senar, Juan Carlos ca
dc.contributor.author Aplin, Lucy M. ca
dc.contributor.other Consorci del Museu de Ciències Naturals de Barcelona ca
dc.date.accessioned 2025-11-05T12:59:39Z
dc.date.available 2025-11-05T12:59:39Z
dc.date.issued 2025-05-07
dc.description.abstract The social complexity hypothesis argues that communicative complexity arises as a result of social complexity, with this occurring through mechanisms including plasticity and selection. Most research to date has focused on ultimate drivers of repertoire size, for example finding that cooperative breeding species exhibit larger repertoires. Until this date, to our knowledge, no study has focused on individual-level drivers of vocal diversity. Here, we examine social networks and vocalizations in wild colonial-nesting monk parakeets (Myiopsitta monachus). We recorded social networks for 337 individuals, relatedness for 100 individuals and matched these with 5599 vocalizations from 229 individuals over 2 years. Overall, we found that all individuals exhibited high contact-call diversity; however, individual-level diversity increased with age in 2020 and with number of nest mates in 2021. Call similarity was not predicted by relatedness, but individuals with stronger affiliative bonds had more dissimilar calls, suggesting an active process to sound unique among close associates. Finally, females had more diverse repertoires, producing relatively fewer contact calls across years and individuals living in larger groups had more diverse repertoires in 2021. Our results demonstrate a multi-faceted social influence on call content, diversity and repertoire diversity, exhibiting how fine-scale variation in social structure can influence expressed vocal complexity. ca
dc.description.abstract info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion ca
dc.description.abstract The social complexity hypothesis argues that communicative complexity arises as a result of social complexity, with this occurring through mechanisms including plasticity and selection. Most research to date has focused on ultimate drivers of repertoire size, for example finding that cooperative breeding species exhibit larger repertoires. Until this date, to our knowledge, no study has focused on individual-level drivers of vocal diversity. Here, we examine social networks and vocalizations in wild colonial-nesting monk parakeets (Myiopsitta monachus). We recorded social networks for 337 individuals, relatedness for 100 individuals and matched these with 5599 vocalizations from 229 individuals over 2 years. Overall, we found that all individuals exhibited high contact-call diversity; however, individual-level diversity increased with age in 2020 and with number of nest mates in 2021. Call similarity was not predicted by relatedness, but individuals with stronger affiliative bonds had more dissimilar calls, suggesting an active process to sound unique among close associates. Finally, females had more diverse repertoires, producing relatively fewer contact calls across years and individuals living in larger groups had more diverse repertoires in 2021. Our results demonstrate a multi-faceted social influence on call content, diversity and repertoire diversity, exhibiting how fine-scale variation in social structure can influence expressed vocal complexity. en
dc.description.abstract info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion en
dc.description.abstract The social complexity hypothesis argues that communicative complexity arises as a result of social complexity, with this occurring through mechanisms including plasticity and selection. Most research to date has focused on ultimate drivers of repertoire size, for example finding that cooperative breeding species exhibit larger repertoires. Until this date, to our knowledge, no study has focused on individual-level drivers of vocal diversity. Here, we examine social networks and vocalizations in wild colonial-nesting monk parakeets (Myiopsitta monachus). We recorded social networks for 337 individuals, relatedness for 100 individuals and matched these with 5599 vocalizations from 229 individuals over 2 years. Overall, we found that all individuals exhibited high contact-call diversity; however, individual-level diversity increased with age in 2020 and with number of nest mates in 2021. Call similarity was not predicted by relatedness, but individuals with stronger affiliative bonds had more dissimilar calls, suggesting an active process to sound unique among close associates. Finally, females had more diverse repertoires, producing relatively fewer contact calls across years and individuals living in larger groups had more diverse repertoires in 2021. Our results demonstrate a multi-faceted social influence on call content, diversity and repertoire diversity, exhibiting how fine-scale variation in social structure can influence expressed vocal complexity. es
dc.description.abstract info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion es
dc.format application/pdf ca
dc.format.extent 17 p. ca
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/2072/484452
dc.identifier.citation Royal Society Open Science, 12:241717 (2025), p. 1-17 ca
dc.identifier.entitat consorcis ca
dc.identifier.other https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.241717 ca
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/11703/142879
dc.language eng ca
dc.provenance Recercat (Dipòsit de la Recerca de Catalunya) ca
dc.rights.notes © 2025 The Authors ca
dc.rights.notes Attribution 4.0 International ca
dc.rights.notes http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ ca
dc.subject Cotorres ca
dc.subject Producció de sons pels animals ca
dc.subject Comunicació animal ca
dc.subject Etologia ca
dc.subject Amazon parrots en
dc.subject Sound production by animals en
dc.subject Animal communication en
dc.subject Animal behavior en
dc.subject Cotorras es
dc.subject Producción de sonidos por animales es
dc.subject Comunicación animal es
dc.subject Etología es
dc.subject.category Ciència i tecnologia ca
dc.subject.forma articles ca
dc.title The effect of social structure on vocal flexibility in monk parakeets ca
dc.type text ca
dc.type.driver info:eu-repo/semantics/article ca
metadadalocal.dependencia 8008920

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