Title of article
‘O sibling, where art thou?’ – a review of avian sibling recognition with respect to the mammalian literature
Author/Authors
Nakagawa، Shinichi نويسنده , , Waas، Joseph R. نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages
-100
From page
101
To page
0
Abstract
Avian literature on sibling recognition is rare compared to that developed by mammalian researchers. We compare avian and mammalian research on sibling recognition to identify why avian work is rare, how approaches differ and what avian and mammalian researchers can learn from each other. Three factors: (1) biological differences between birds and mammals, (2) conceptual biases and (3) practical constraints, appear to influence our current understanding. Avian research focuses on colonial species because sibling recognition is considered adaptive where ‘mixing potential’ of dependent young is high; research on a wider range of species, breeding systems and ecological conditions is now needed. Studies of acoustic recognition cues dominate avian literature; other types of cues (e.g. visual, olfactory) deserve further attention. The effect of gender on avian sibling recognition has yet to be investigated; mammalian work shows that gender can have important influences. Most importantly, many researchers assume that birds recognise siblings through ‘direct familiarisation’ (commonly known as associative learning or familiarity); future experiments should also incorporate tests for ‘indirect familiarisation’ (commonly known as phenotype matching). If direct familiarisation proves crucial, avian research should investigate how periods of separation influence sibling discrimination. Mammalian researchers typically interpret sibling recognition in broad functional terms (nepotism, optimal outbreeding); some avian researchers more successfully identify specific and testable adaptive explanations, with greater relevance to natural contexts. We end by reporting exciting discoveries from recent studies of avian sibling recognition that inspire further interest in this topic.
Keywords
sibling recognition , Birds , kin discrimination , individual recognition , indirect familiarisation , direct familiarisation , Mammals , kin recognition
Journal title
Biological Reviews
Serial Year
2004
Journal title
Biological Reviews
Record number
120630
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