fbpx
Wikipedia

Songbird

A songbird is a bird belonging to the suborder Passeri of the perching birds (Passeriformes). Another name that is sometimes seen as the scientific or vernacular name is Oscines, from Latin oscen, "songbird". The Passeriformes contains 5,000 or so species[1][2] found all over the world, in which the vocal organ typically is developed in such a way as to produce a diverse and elaborate bird song.

Songbirds form one of the two major lineages of extant perching birds (~4,000 species), the other being the Tyranni (~1,000 species), which are most diverse in the Neotropics and absent from many parts of the world.[2] The Tyranni have a simpler syrinx musculature, and while their vocalizations are often just as complex and striking as those of songbirds, they are altogether more mechanical sounding. There is a third perching bird lineage, the Acanthisitti from New Zealand, of which only two species remain alive today.[3] Recent estimates indicate that songbirds originated 50 million years ago.[4] The distribution of their basal lineages suggest that their origin and initial diversification occurred exclusively in the Australian continent and only about 40 million years ago, oscines started to colonize Eurasia, Africa, and eventually the Americas.[5][4][6]

Description edit

The song in this clade is essentially territorial, because it communicates the identity and whereabouts of an individual to other birds, and also signals sexual intentions. Sexual selection among songbirds is highly based on mimetic vocalization. Female preference has shown in some populations to be based on the extent of a male's song repertoire. The larger a male's repertoire, the more females a male individual attracts.[7] It is not to be confused with bird calls that are used for alarms and contact and are especially important in birds that feed or migrate in flocks. While almost all living birds give calls of some sort, well-developed songs are only given by a few lineages outside the songbirds. And still, not all songbirds proffer a call that is distinctly melodious. Songbirds do, however, possess a highly developed vocal organ, the syrinx, that enables their sonorous activity. This organ, also known as a song box, can be found where the windpipe meets diverging bronchial tubes which lead to the lungs. The organ is a solid, bony structure lined with a film of membranes which air passes through as the songbird calls. While the song boxes of songbirds vary in size and intricacy, this does not necessarily determine the songbird's ability to voice their song. Researchers believe this has more to do with the length of the windpipe.[8]

The American robin, like most thrushes, has a complex near continuous song, consisting of discrete units often repeated and spliced by a string of pauses.

Other birds (especially non-passeriforms) sometimes have songs to attract mates or hold territory, but these are usually simple and repetitive, lacking the variety of many oscine songs. The monotonous repetition of the common cuckoo or little crake can be contrasted with the variety of a nightingale or marsh warbler. However, although many songbirds have songs that are pleasant to the human ear, this is not invariably the case. Many members of the crow family (Corvidae) communicate with croaks or screeches, which sound harsh to humans. Even these, however, have a song of sorts, a softer twitter that is given between courting partners. And even though some parrots (which are not songbirds) can be taught to repeat human speech, vocal mimicry among birds is almost completely restricted to songbirds, some of which (such as the lyrebirds or the aptly named mockingbirds) excel in imitating the sounds of other birds or even environmental noises.[9]

The birds from higher altitudes have evolved thicker downs (also known as jackets) to protect themselves from the changes in climate. Their feathers have outer and inner portions, with the lower down being fluffier and warmer to provide increased warmth.[10]

Song repertoire and courtship edit

Sexual selection can be broken down into several different studies regarding different aspects of a bird's song. As a result, songs can vary even within a single species. Many believe that song repertoire and cognition have a direct relationship. However, a study published in 2013 has shown that cognitive abilities may not all be directly related to the song repertoire of a songbird. Specifically, spatial learning is said to have an inverse relationship with song repertoire. So for example, this would be an individual who does not migrate as far as others in the species but has a better song repertoire. This suggests an evolutionary trade-off between possible alleles. With natural selection choosing traits best fit for reproductive success, there could be a trade-off in either direction depending on which trait would produce a higher fitness at that time period.[11]

Nightingale song: Because nightingales sing both day and night, it is believed night songs are courtship related and dawn songs are territorial in nature.[by whom?]

Song repertoire can be attributed to male songbirds as it is one of the main mechanisms of courtship. Song repertoires differ from male individual to male individual and species to species. Some species may typically have large repertoires while others may have significantly smaller ones. Mate choice in female songbirds is a significant realm of study as song abilities are continuously evolving. Males often sing to assert their dominance over other males in competition for a female, sometimes in lieu of a combative episode, and to arouse the female by announcing a readiness to mate. Though less frequent, females have also been known to sing occasionally a duet with a mate as an affirmation of their partnership. While some will sing their song from a familiar perch, other species common to grasslands will sing a familiar song each time they fly. [12] Currently, there have been numerous studies involving songbird repertoires, unfortunately, there has not yet been a concrete evidence to confirm that every songbird species prefers larger repertoires. A conclusion can be made that it can vary between species on whether a larger repertoire is connected to better fitness. With this conclusion, it can be inferred that evolution via natural selection, or sexual selection, favors the ability to retain larger repertoires for these certain species as it leads to higher reproductive success.[7] During times of courtship, it is said that male songbirds increase their repertoire by mimicking other species songs. The better the mimicking ability, retaining ability, and the quantity of other species mimicked has been proven to have a positive relationship with mating success. Female preferences cause the constant improvement of accuracy and presentation of the copied songs.[13] Another theory known as the "song-sharing hypothesis" suggests that females prefer simpler, more homogenous songs that signal a male of familiar territory. As birdsong can be broken into regional dialects through this process of mimicry, the foreign song of a newcomer suggests the lack of territorial possession. This can be costly in the wake of territorial conflicts between disparate songbird populations and may compel a female to prefer a male spouting a familiar song of the area. [14]

Taxonomy and systematics edit

Sibley and Alquist divided songbirds into two "parvorders", Corvida and Passerida (standard taxonomic practice would rank these as infraorders), distributed in Australo-Papua and Eurasia respectively.[15] Subsequent molecular studies, however, show this treatment to be somewhat erroneous. Passerida is a highly diverse lineage, uniting over one-third of all bird species to include (in 2015) 3,885 species[1]). These are divided into three major superfamilies (though not exactly corresponding to the Sibley-Ahlquist arrangement), in addition to some minor lineages.

In contrast, Sibley & Alquist's "Corvida" is a phylogenetic grade and an artefact of the phenetic methodology. The bulk of the "Corvida" make up the large clade Corvides (812 species as of 2015[1]), which is a sister group to the Passerida. The remaining 15 oscine families (343 species in 2015[1]) form a series of basally branching sister groups to the Corvoid - Passerid clade.[16] All of these groups, which form at least six successively branching basal clades, are found exclusively or predominantly in Australasia. Australian endemics are also prominent among basal lineages in both Corvoids and Passerids, suggesting that songbirds originated and diverged in Australia.[5]

Scrubbirds and lyrebirds, of which there are just two species of each, represent the oldest lineage of songbirds on Earth. The rufous scrubbird, Atrichornis rufescens, is essentially confined to the Gondwana Rainforests of Australia World Heritage Area, occurring in both Queensland and New South Wales sections. It is now only found at elevations above 600 m (2,000 ft).[17]

Families edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d IOC World Bird List 5.1. doi:10.14344/IOC.ML.5.1.
  2. ^ a b Edwards, Scott V. and John Harshman. 2013. Passeriformes. Perching Birds, Passerine Birds. Version 06 February 2013 (under construction). http://tolweb.org/Passeriformes/15868/2013.02.06 2022-10-31 at the Wayback Machine in The Tree of Life Web Project, http://tolweb.org/[Accessed[permanent dead link] 2017/12/11].
  3. ^ Barker, F. K; Cibois, A; Schikler, P; Feinstein, J; Cracraft, J (2004). "Phylogeny and diversification of the largest avian radiation". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 101 (30): 11040–5. Bibcode:2004PNAS..10111040B. doi:10.1073/pnas.0401892101. JSTOR 3372849. PMC 503738. PMID 15263073.
  4. ^ a b Claramunt, S.; Cracraft, J. (2015). "A new time tree reveals Earth history's imprint on the evolution of modern birds". Science Advances. 1 (11): e1501005. doi:10.1126/sciadv.1501005. PMC 4730849.
  5. ^ a b Low, T. (2014), Where Song Began: Australia's Birds and How They Changed the World, Tyre: Penguin Australia[page needed]
  6. ^ Reilly, John (2018). The Ascent of Birds. Pelagic Publishing. p. 182. ISBN 978-1-78427-203-6.
  7. ^ a b Byers, Bruce E; Kroodsma, Donald E (2009). "Female mate choice and songbird song repertoires". Animal Behaviour. 77 (1): 13–22. doi:10.1016/j.anbehav.2008.10.003. S2CID 53146576.
  8. ^ "Songbird | bird". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2020-12-02.
  9. ^ Fleming, Kaitlin (11 December 2011). "The Northern Mockingbird: Nature's Copycat". FSU ornithology: the bird blogs. Retrieved 18 June 2018.
  10. ^ Barve, Sahas; Ramesh, Vijay; Dotterer, Toni M.; Dove, Carla J. (2021). "Elevation and body size drive convergent variation in thermo-insulative feather structure of Himalayan birds". Ecography. 44 (5): 680–689. doi:10.1111/ecog.05376. ISSN 1600-0587.
  11. ^ Sewall, K. B; Soha, J. A; Peters, S; Nowicki, S (2013). "Potential trade-off between vocal ornamentation and spatial ability in a songbird". Biology Letters. 9 (4): 20130344. doi:10.1098/rsbl.2013.0344. PMC 3730647. PMID 23697642.
  12. ^ "Songbird | bird". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2020-12-02.
  13. ^ Borgia, Gerald; Siani, Jennifer; Coyle, Brian; Patricelli, Gail Lisa; Coleman, Seth William (2007). "Female preferences drive the evolution of mimetic accuracy in male sexual displays". Biology Letters. 3 (5): 463–6. doi:10.1098/rsbl.2007.0234. PMC 2391182. PMID 17623632.
  14. ^ "The Development of Birdsong | Learn Science at Scitable". www.nature.com. Retrieved 2020-12-02.
  15. ^ Selvatti, A.P. et al. (2015) A Paleogene origin for crown passerines and the diversification of the Oscines in the New World. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 88:1-15.
  16. ^ Harshman, John. (2006). Oscines. Songbirds. Version 31 July 2006 (under construction). http://tolweb.org/Oscines/29222/2006.07.31 2020-09-19 at the Wayback Machine in The Tree of Life Web Project, http://tolweb.org/
  17. ^ Chris Cooney, "How songbirds island-hopped their way from Australia to colonise the world", The Conversation, August 31, 2016.

External links edit

  • Oscines 2020-09-19 at the Wayback Machine Tree of Life web project article July 31, 2006.

songbird, other, uses, disambiguation, passeri, redirects, here, surname, passeri, surname, songbird, bird, belonging, suborder, passeri, perching, birds, passeriformes, another, name, that, sometimes, seen, scientific, vernacular, name, oscines, from, latin, . For other uses see Songbird disambiguation Passeri redirects here For the surname see Passeri surname A songbird is a bird belonging to the suborder Passeri of the perching birds Passeriformes Another name that is sometimes seen as the scientific or vernacular name is Oscines from Latin oscen songbird The Passeriformes contains 5 000 or so species 1 2 found all over the world in which the vocal organ typically is developed in such a way as to produce a diverse and elaborate bird song SongbirdTemporal range Early Eocene to present 56 0 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg NEastern yellow robin Eopsaltria australis source source Song of a chipping sparrow Spizella passerina Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AvesOrder PasseriformesClade EupasseresSuborder PasseriLinnaeus 1758CladesMenuridaeAtrichornithidaeClimacteridaePtilonorhynchidaeMaluridaeMeliphagidaeDasyornithidaePardalotidaeAcanthizidaePomatostomidaeOrthonychidaeCnemophilidaeMelanocharitidaeCallaeidaeNotiomystidaeCorvidesPasseridaSynonymsSee textSongbirds form one of the two major lineages of extant perching birds 4 000 species the other being the Tyranni 1 000 species which are most diverse in the Neotropics and absent from many parts of the world 2 The Tyranni have a simpler syrinx musculature and while their vocalizations are often just as complex and striking as those of songbirds they are altogether more mechanical sounding There is a third perching bird lineage the Acanthisitti from New Zealand of which only two species remain alive today 3 Recent estimates indicate that songbirds originated 50 million years ago 4 The distribution of their basal lineages suggest that their origin and initial diversification occurred exclusively in the Australian continent and only about 40 million years ago oscines started to colonize Eurasia Africa and eventually the Americas 5 4 6 Contents 1 Description 2 Song repertoire and courtship 3 Taxonomy and systematics 3 1 Families 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksDescription editThe song in this clade is essentially territorial because it communicates the identity and whereabouts of an individual to other birds and also signals sexual intentions Sexual selection among songbirds is highly based on mimetic vocalization Female preference has shown in some populations to be based on the extent of a male s song repertoire The larger a male s repertoire the more females a male individual attracts 7 It is not to be confused with bird calls that are used for alarms and contact and are especially important in birds that feed or migrate in flocks While almost all living birds give calls of some sort well developed songs are only given by a few lineages outside the songbirds And still not all songbirds proffer a call that is distinctly melodious Songbirds do however possess a highly developed vocal organ the syrinx that enables their sonorous activity This organ also known as a song box can be found where the windpipe meets diverging bronchial tubes which lead to the lungs The organ is a solid bony structure lined with a film of membranes which air passes through as the songbird calls While the song boxes of songbirds vary in size and intricacy this does not necessarily determine the songbird s ability to voice their song Researchers believe this has more to do with the length of the windpipe 8 source source The American robin like most thrushes has a complex near continuous song consisting of discrete units often repeated and spliced by a string of pauses Other birds especially non passeriforms sometimes have songs to attract mates or hold territory but these are usually simple and repetitive lacking the variety of many oscine songs The monotonous repetition of the common cuckoo or little crake can be contrasted with the variety of a nightingale or marsh warbler However although many songbirds have songs that are pleasant to the human ear this is not invariably the case Many members of the crow family Corvidae communicate with croaks or screeches which sound harsh to humans Even these however have a song of sorts a softer twitter that is given between courting partners And even though some parrots which are not songbirds can be taught to repeat human speech vocal mimicry among birds is almost completely restricted to songbirds some of which such as the lyrebirds or the aptly named mockingbirds excel in imitating the sounds of other birds or even environmental noises 9 The birds from higher altitudes have evolved thicker downs also known as jackets to protect themselves from the changes in climate Their feathers have outer and inner portions with the lower down being fluffier and warmer to provide increased warmth 10 Song repertoire and courtship editSexual selection can be broken down into several different studies regarding different aspects of a bird s song As a result songs can vary even within a single species Many believe that song repertoire and cognition have a direct relationship However a study published in 2013 has shown that cognitive abilities may not all be directly related to the song repertoire of a songbird Specifically spatial learning is said to have an inverse relationship with song repertoire So for example this would be an individual who does not migrate as far as others in the species but has a better song repertoire This suggests an evolutionary trade off between possible alleles With natural selection choosing traits best fit for reproductive success there could be a trade off in either direction depending on which trait would produce a higher fitness at that time period 11 source source Nightingale song Because nightingales sing both day and night it is believed night songs are courtship related and dawn songs are territorial in nature by whom Song repertoire can be attributed to male songbirds as it is one of the main mechanisms of courtship Song repertoires differ from male individual to male individual and species to species Some species may typically have large repertoires while others may have significantly smaller ones Mate choice in female songbirds is a significant realm of study as song abilities are continuously evolving Males often sing to assert their dominance over other males in competition for a female sometimes in lieu of a combative episode and to arouse the female by announcing a readiness to mate Though less frequent females have also been known to sing occasionally a duet with a mate as an affirmation of their partnership While some will sing their song from a familiar perch other species common to grasslands will sing a familiar song each time they fly 12 Currently there have been numerous studies involving songbird repertoires unfortunately there has not yet been a concrete evidence to confirm that every songbird species prefers larger repertoires A conclusion can be made that it can vary between species on whether a larger repertoire is connected to better fitness With this conclusion it can be inferred that evolution via natural selection or sexual selection favors the ability to retain larger repertoires for these certain species as it leads to higher reproductive success 7 During times of courtship it is said that male songbirds increase their repertoire by mimicking other species songs The better the mimicking ability retaining ability and the quantity of other species mimicked has been proven to have a positive relationship with mating success Female preferences cause the constant improvement of accuracy and presentation of the copied songs 13 Another theory known as the song sharing hypothesis suggests that females prefer simpler more homogenous songs that signal a male of familiar territory As birdsong can be broken into regional dialects through this process of mimicry the foreign song of a newcomer suggests the lack of territorial possession This can be costly in the wake of territorial conflicts between disparate songbird populations and may compel a female to prefer a male spouting a familiar song of the area 14 Taxonomy and systematics editSibley and Alquist divided songbirds into two parvorders Corvida and Passerida standard taxonomic practice would rank these as infraorders distributed in Australo Papua and Eurasia respectively 15 Subsequent molecular studies however show this treatment to be somewhat erroneous Passerida is a highly diverse lineage uniting over one third of all bird species to include in 2015 3 885 species 1 These are divided into three major superfamilies though not exactly corresponding to the Sibley Ahlquist arrangement in addition to some minor lineages In contrast Sibley amp Alquist s Corvida is a phylogenetic grade and an artefact of the phenetic methodology The bulk of the Corvida make up the large clade Corvides 812 species as of 2015 1 which is a sister group to the Passerida The remaining 15 oscine families 343 species in 2015 1 form a series of basally branching sister groups to the Corvoid Passerid clade 16 All of these groups which form at least six successively branching basal clades are found exclusively or predominantly in Australasia Australian endemics are also prominent among basal lineages in both Corvoids and Passerids suggesting that songbirds originated and diverged in Australia 5 Scrubbirds and lyrebirds of which there are just two species of each represent the oldest lineage of songbirds on Earth The rufous scrubbird Atrichornis rufescens is essentially confined to the Gondwana Rainforests of Australia World Heritage Area occurring in both Queensland and New South Wales sections It is now only found at elevations above 600 m 2 000 ft 17 Families edit Menuroidea Menuridae lyrebirds Atrichornithidae scrub birds Bowerbirds and Australian treecreepers Climacteridae Australian treecreepers Ptilonorhynchidae bowerbirds Meliphagoidea honeyeaters and allies Maluridae fairy wrens emu wrens and grasswrens Meliphagidae true honeyeaters and chats Dasyornithidae bristlebirds Pardalotidae pardalotes Acanthizidae scrubwrens thornbills and gerygones Australopapuan babblers Pomatostomidae Australasian babblers Logrunners Orthonychidae logrunners Other basal lineages Cnemophilidae satinbirds Cnemophilus and Loboparadisea Melanocharitidae berrypeckers and longbills Callaeidae New Zealand wattlebirds kokako saddleback and huia Notiomystidae stitchbird Corvides Paramythiidae tit berrypecker and crested berrypeckers Psophodidae whipbirds jewel babblers and quail thrushes Platysteiridae wattle eyes and batis Malaconotidae bush shrikes Machaerirynchidae boatbills Vangidae vangas woodshrikes and helmetshrikes Pityriasidae Bornean bristlehead Artamidae butcherbirds currawongs and Australian magpie formerly in Cracticidae Rhagologidae mottled whistler Aegithinidae ioras Campephagidae cuckooshrikes and trillers Mohouidae whiteheads Neosittidae sittellas Eulacestomidae ploughbill Oreoicidae Australo Papuan bellbirds Pachycephalidae whistlers shrike thrushes pitohuis and allies Laniidae shrikes Vireonidae vireos Oriolidae orioles figbirds and piopio formerly Turnagridae Dicruridae drongos Rhipiduridae fantails Monarchidae monarchs and allies Platylophidae jayshrike Corvidae crows magpies and jays Corcoracidae white winged chough and apostlebird Melampittidae melampittas Ifritidae ifritabirds Paradisaeidae birds of paradise Passerida Petroicidae Australasian robins Picathartidae rockfowl Chaetopidae rockjumpers Eupetidae rail babbler Bombycillidae waxwings and allies Ptiliogonatidae silky flycatchers Hypocoliidae hypocolius Dulidae palmchat Mohoidae some Hawaiian honeyeaters Moho and Chaetoptila genera not closely related to Meliphagidae Hylocitreidae hylocitrea Stenostiridae fairy flycatcher and allies Paridae tits chickadees and titmouse Remizidae penduline tits Nicatoridae nicators Panuridae bearded reedling Alaudidae larks Pycnonotidae bulbuls Hirundinidae swallows and martins Pnoepygidae wren babblers Macrosphenidae crombecs and African warblers Cettiidae bush warblers and allies Scotocercidae streaked scrub warbler Erythrocercidae yellow flycatchers Aegithalidae long tailed tits Phylloscopidae leaf warblers and allies Recently split from Sylviidae Acrocephalidae reed warblers and allies Locustellidae grassbirds and allies Donacobiidae black capped donacobius Bernieridae Malagasy warblers Cisticolidae cisticolas and allies Timaliidae babblers Pellorneidae ground babblers Leiothrichidae laughingthrushes and allies Sylviidae Old World warblers Zosteropidae white eyes Arcanatoridae dapple throat and allies Promeropidae sugarbirds Irenidae fairy bluebirds Regulidae kinglets Elachuridae elachuras Hyliotidae hyliotas Troglodytidae wrens Polioptilidae gnatcatchers Sittidae nuthatches Tichodromidae wallcreeper Certhiidae treecreepers Mimidae mockingbirds and thrashers Sturnidae starlings Buphagidae oxpeckers Turdidae thrushes and allies Muscicapidae Old World flycatchers and chats Cinclidae dippers Chloropseidae leafbirds Dicaeidae flowerpeckers Nectariniidae sunbirds Passeridae true sparrows Ploceidae weavers and widowbirds Estrildidae estrildid finches waxbills munias etc Viduidae indigo birds and whydahs Peucedramidae olive warbler Prunellidae accentor Motacillidae wagtails and pipits Urocynchramidae Przevalski s finch Fringillidae true finches and Hawaiian honeycreepers formerly Drepanididae Parulidae New World warblers for example the black throated blue warblers and allies Icteridae American blackbirds New World orioles grackles and cowbirds Coerebidae bananaquit Emberizidae buntings Passerellidae New World sparrows Thraupidae tanagers true honeycreepers and allies Calcariidae snow buntings and longspurs Cardinalidae cardinals and alliesSee also editSong systemReferences edit a b c d IOC World Bird List 5 1 doi 10 14344 IOC ML 5 1 a b Edwards Scott V and John Harshman 2013 Passeriformes Perching Birds Passerine Birds Version 06 February 2013 under construction http tolweb org Passeriformes 15868 2013 02 06 Archived 2022 10 31 at the Wayback Machine in The Tree of Life Web Project http tolweb org Accessed permanent dead link 2017 12 11 Barker F K Cibois A Schikler P Feinstein J Cracraft J 2004 Phylogeny and diversification of the largest avian radiation Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 101 30 11040 5 Bibcode 2004PNAS 10111040B doi 10 1073 pnas 0401892101 JSTOR 3372849 PMC 503738 PMID 15263073 a b Claramunt S Cracraft J 2015 A new time tree reveals Earth history s imprint on the evolution of modern birds Science Advances 1 11 e1501005 doi 10 1126 sciadv 1501005 PMC 4730849 a b Low T 2014 Where Song Began Australia s Birds and How They Changed the World Tyre Penguin Australia page needed Reilly John 2018 The Ascent of Birds Pelagic Publishing p 182 ISBN 978 1 78427 203 6 a b Byers Bruce E Kroodsma Donald E 2009 Female mate choice and songbird song repertoires Animal Behaviour 77 1 13 22 doi 10 1016 j anbehav 2008 10 003 S2CID 53146576 Songbird bird Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2020 12 02 Fleming Kaitlin 11 December 2011 The Northern Mockingbird Nature s Copycat FSU ornithology the bird blogs Retrieved 18 June 2018 Barve Sahas Ramesh Vijay Dotterer Toni M Dove Carla J 2021 Elevation and body size drive convergent variation in thermo insulative feather structure of Himalayan birds Ecography 44 5 680 689 doi 10 1111 ecog 05376 ISSN 1600 0587 Sewall K B Soha J A Peters S Nowicki S 2013 Potential trade off between vocal ornamentation and spatial ability in a songbird Biology Letters 9 4 20130344 doi 10 1098 rsbl 2013 0344 PMC 3730647 PMID 23697642 Songbird bird Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2020 12 02 Borgia Gerald Siani Jennifer Coyle Brian Patricelli Gail Lisa Coleman Seth William 2007 Female preferences drive the evolution of mimetic accuracy in male sexual displays Biology Letters 3 5 463 6 doi 10 1098 rsbl 2007 0234 PMC 2391182 PMID 17623632 The Development of Birdsong Learn Science at Scitable www nature com Retrieved 2020 12 02 Selvatti A P et al 2015 A Paleogene origin for crown passerines and the diversification of the Oscines in the New World Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 88 1 15 Harshman John 2006 Oscines Songbirds Version 31 July 2006 under construction http tolweb org Oscines 29222 2006 07 31 Archived 2020 09 19 at the Wayback Machine in The Tree of Life Web Project http tolweb org Chris Cooney How songbirds island hopped their way from Australia to colonise the world The Conversation August 31 2016 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Passeri nbsp Look up oscine in Wiktionary the free dictionary Oscines Archived 2020 09 19 at the Wayback Machine Tree of Life web project article July 31 2006 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Songbird amp oldid 1206730802, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.