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Behavioral Ecology Advance Access published online on February 7, 2008

Behavioral Ecology, doi:10.1093/beheco/arn003
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© The Author 2008. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Society for Behavioral Ecology. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Parent–offspring communication in the western sandpiper

Matthew Johnsona, Susanne Arefb and Jeffrey R. Waltersa

a Department of Biological Sciences b Department of Statistics, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, VA 24061, USA

Address correspondence to M. Johnson, who is now at the US Geological Survey, Forest and Rangeland Ecosystem Science Center, 3200 SW Jefferson Way, Corvallis, OR 97333, USA. E-mail: jedibirdnerd{at}yahoo.com


   Abstract

Western sandpiper (Calidris mauri) chicks are precocial and leave the nest shortly after hatch to forage independently. Chicks require thermoregulatory assistance from parents (brooding) for 5–7 days posthatch, and parents facilitate chick survival for 2–3 weeks posthatch by leading and defending chicks. Parental vocal signals are likely involved in protecting chicks from predators, preventing them from wandering away and becoming lost and leading them to good foraging locations. Using observational and experimental methods in the field, we describe and demonstrate the form and function of parent–chick communication in the western sandpiper. We document 4 distinct calls produced by parents that are apparently directed toward their chicks (brood, gather, alarm, and freeze calls). Through experimental playback of parental and non–parental vocalizations to chicks in a small arena, we demonstrated the following: 1) chicks respond to the alarm call by vocalizing relatively less often and moving away from the signal source, 2) chicks respond to the gather call by vocalizing relatively more often and moving toward the signal source, and 3) chicks respond to the freeze call by vocalizing relatively less often and crouching motionless on the substrate for extended periods of time. Chicks exhibited consistent directional movement and space use to parental and non–parental signals. Although fewer vocalizations were given in response to non–parental signals, which may indicate a weaker response to unfamiliar individuals, the relative number of chick calls given to each type of call signal was consistent between parental and non–parental signals. We also discovered 2 distinct chick vocalizations (chick-contact and chick-alarm calls) during arena playback experiments. Results indicate that sandpiper parents are able to elicit antipredatory chick behaviors and direct chick movement and vocalizations through vocal signals. Future study of parent–offspring communication should determine whether shorebird chicks exhibit parental recognition though vocalizations and the role of chick vocalizations in parental behavior.

Key words: Calidris mauri, call function, parental care, shorebird, vocal signals.

Received 26 July 2006; revised 13 June 2007; accepted 14 December 2007.


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