Elsevier

Animal Behaviour

Volume 117, July 2016, Pages 155-165
Animal Behaviour

Behavioural plasticity in the onset of dawn song under intermittent experimental night lighting

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.anbehav.2016.05.001Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Some songbirds start dawn song earlier in habitats exposed to light pollution.

  • This change in the timing of singing may result from behavioural plasticity.

  • We manipulated light at night in a cyclic fashion in undisturbed forest patches.

  • The study species advanced onset of dawn singing under experimental light at night.

  • Response was strong in the robin, but weak in blackbirds, great tits and blue tits.

The disruption of daily rhythms is one of the most studied ecological consequences of light pollution. Previous work showed that several songbird species initiated dawn song earlier in areas with light pollution. However, the mechanisms underlying this shift are still unknown. Individuals may immediately adjust their timing of singing to the presence of artificial light (behavioural plasticity), but the observed effect may also be due to phenotype-dependent habitat choice, effects of conditions during early life or micro-evolution. The main aim of this study was to experimentally investigate how males of four common passerine species respond to day-to-day variation in the presence of artificial night lighting in terms of the timing of singing. During two consecutive breeding seasons, we manipulated the presence of light throughout the night in a cyclic fashion in several naturally undisturbed forest patches. We show that individuals of all four species immediately and reversibly adjusted their onset of dawn singing in response to artificial light. The effect was strongest in the European robin, but relatively small in the blue tit, the great tit and the blackbird. The effect in the latter two species was smaller than expected from the correlational studies. This may be coincidence (small sample size of this study), but it could also indicate that there are longer-term effects of living in light-polluted urban areas on timing of dawn singing, or that birds use compensatory behaviours such as light avoidance. We found no evidence that our light treatment had carryover effects into the subsequent dark period, but robins progressively advanced their dawn singing during the light treatment.

Keywords

Cyanistes caeruleus
dawn chorus
Erithacus rubecula
light pollution
Parus major
plasticity
Turdus merula

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