Degradation of wren Troglodytes troglodytes song: Implications for information transfer and ranging
暂无分享,去创建一个
Torben Dabelsteen | Ole Næsbye Larsen | O. Larsen | T. Dabelsteen | S. Pedersen | Jo Holland | Jo Holland | Simon Boel Pedersen
[1] R. H. Wiley. Associations of Song Properties with Habitats for Territorial Oscine Birds of Eastern North America , 1991, The American Naturalist.
[2] T. Aubin,et al. Reaction to conspecific degraded song by the wren Troglodytes troglodytes: Territorial response and choice of song post , 1997, Behavioural Processes.
[3] Song features and singing heights of American warblers: Maximization or optimization of distance? , 1981 .
[4] Marc Naguib,et al. Auditory distance assessment of singing conspecifies in Carolina wrens: the role of reverberation and frequency-dependent attenuation , 1995, Animal Behaviour.
[5] B. Horne. Assessing Vocal Variety in the Winter Wren, a Bird with a Complex Repertoire , 1995 .
[6] R. H. Wiley,et al. Reverberations and Amplitude Fluctuations in the Propagation of Sound in a Forest: Implications for Animal Communication , 1980, The American Naturalist.
[7] Torben Dabelsteen,et al. Habitat‐induced degradation of sound signals: Quantifying the effects of communication sounds and bird location on blur ratio, excess attenuation, and signal‐to‐noise ratio in blackbird song , 1993 .
[8] E. Morton. Ecological Sources of Selection on Avian Sounds , 1975, The American Naturalist.
[9] Torben Dabelsteen,et al. A method for computerized modification of certain natural animal sounds for communication study purposes , 2004, Biological Cybernetics.
[10] Peter K. McGregor,et al. The response of Western Meadowlarks (Sturnella neglecta) to the playback of undegraded and degraded songs , 1984 .