Vocal convergence during formation of social relationships in vampire bats
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Vocal behavior provides an important window into animal social lives. A longstanding hypothesis for many group-living birds and mammals is that the formation of affiliative relationships causes an increase in call similarity between individuals (vocal convergence). Testing this causal effect can be difficult, however, because it requires experimentally forming new relationships. Here, we demonstrate convergence in the contact calls of common vampire bats ( Desmodus rotundus ) that we introduced and experimentally housed together. To estimate and disentangle the roles of kinship, co-housing (familiarity), allogrooming, and food sharing in predicting call similarity, we first measured call similarity using 35 features of 565,557 contact calls from 94 bats, then fit a series of Bayesian generalized multi-membership models. We also measured changes in call similarity for a subset of individuals that were recorded before and after co-housing. We found that co-housing caused vocal convergence. Furthermore, food-sharing rates among familiar nonkin within the same co-housed group predicted contact call similarity. This finding suggests that the development of cooperative relationships causes further vocal convergence beyond the initial convergence caused by co-housing. Our findings have implications for the development of cooperative relationships and vocal learning.