01/08/2025 | News release | Distributed by Public on 01/08/2025 13:36
Ecological and evolutionary traits like body mass and beak size influence the vocalization frequency of bird species, such as the white-rumped Shama (Copsychus malabaricus), in Chikkamagaluru, India. Photo by Madhu Venkatesh, Wildlife Conservation Action Team
Birds make sounds to communicate, whether to find a potential mate, ward off predators, or just sing for pleasure.
But the conditions that contribute to the immense diversity of the sounds they make are not well understood. Researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison have conducted the first-ever global study of the factors that influence bird sounds, using more than 100,000 audio recordings from around the world. The new study, recently published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B, revealed insightful patterns for why birds make certain noises and at what frequency.
Hypotheses about the role of habitat, geography, body size and beak shape in forming bird sounds have been tested on small scales before. But H.S. Sathya Chandra Sagar, a UW-Madison doctoral student who works with Professor Zuzana Buřivalová in the Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology and the Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies, wanted to see if they held up on a global scale.
Sagar analyzed audio recordings of bird sounds taken by people around the world and submitted to a bird-watching repository called xeno-canto . The analyzed recordings represented 77% of known bird species.
The study's major takeaways included:
The research also contributed to the broader understanding of soundscapes - all of the sounds heard in any particular landscape. Soundscapes are often used as part of conservation studies, but Sagar realized "there's very little that we know about the forces that govern soundscapes."
He hopes this foundational work will provide a platform for future studies to improve conservation efforts by developing ways to monitor the health of an ecosystem through soundscapes.
"In the tropics and all over the world, larger birds tend to be hunted for meat," he says as an example. "Larger birds [tend] to call at a low frequency, and if we don't find any sound in the lower frequency, we could [conclude] there may be more hunting in this landscape."
Next, Sagar hopes to use 24-hour soundscape recordings to understand if some birds modify the timing of their song in addition to their frequencies to communicate with their peers in a landscape crowded with noise. And he notes the important role that birdwatchers and citizen scientists play in discovering new insights about our natural world.