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BirdNote Daily

Birds Can Keep the Beat

BirdNote Daily

BirdNote

Bird Song, How To, Birdnote, Sound, Nature, Ecosystems, Science, Birdwatching, Education, Ecology, Nature Study, Birds, Natural Sciences, Birding, 769080, Bird Note, Bird, Outdoors, Wildlife

4.81.3K Ratings

🗓️ 19 December 2024

⏱️ 2 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Some birds have a finely-tuned sense of rhythm.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is Bird Note.

0:05.0

Sometimes birds change their tune.

0:10.0

For example, white-throated sparrows in many areas have shortened their songs in just a few decades.

0:26.6

But there are also songs that appear to have stayed the same over millennia.

0:39.3

Several related species of sunbirds in eastern Africa live on isolated mountaintops, also known as Sky Islands. Their mountaintop habitats led them to become distinct populations and, in some cases, evolve

0:46.3

into different species.

0:50.3

But researchers found that two populations of one species, the forest double-collared sunbird,

0:57.8

still have nearly identical songs, despite having separated into different mountains at least 500,000 years ago.

1:07.5

That suggests the song that these sunbirds sing today is probably very similar to that

1:14.4

of their long lost ancestors. The findings show that there are good reasons for a species

1:22.8

to keep singing the same old song. Having a unique and stable song helps birds recognize members

1:31.0

of their own species, even if their ancestors split up long ago. So, if a tune works,

1:40.2

don't change it. For Bird Note, I'm Michael Stein.

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