Linguistic Rules of Syntax and Sharing in the Complex Songs of a Tropical Passerine
Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
1. Birdsong offers a powerful model to study the evolution of complex communication systems. While most song syntax and sharing research focuses on temperate species with fixed repertoires, we know far less about tropical songbirds with large, open-ended vocal systems.
2. We examined song structure and cultural transmission in the White-bellied Sholakili Sholicola albiventris , a tropical passerine endemic to the Shola Sky Islands of southern India. We studied song complexity and spectro-temporal variation using over 6,000 songs from 17 color-banded males across five years. We analyzed the song syntax using sequence-based metrics, including Levenshtein Distances and N-gram models.
3. Our results reveal high syntactic variability across short and long timescales, with stable note-type cores and structured expansions of combinatorial sequences. Higher-order N-gram turnover was rapid and strongly individual-specific, while broadly sharing the population-level note pool. Song sharing was significantly higher among neighbors than non-neighbors.
4. Using Generalized Additive Models, we explain how social and ecological factors, including neighbor count, territory area, repertoire size, N-gram usage, and the spectro-temporal structure of N-grams, determine consistency across years and sharing across individuals. This study highlights parallels between human linguistics and syntactic organization in the complex songs of a tropical passerine.