Journal article

Relative importance of multiple plumage ornaments as status signals in golden whistlers (Pachycephala pectoralis)

WFD Van Dongen, RA Mulder

Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology | SPRINGER | Published : 2007

Abstract

Status signals are traits that advertise an individual's competitive abilities to conspecifics during aggressive disputes. Most studies of status signals in birds have focussed on melanin-based plumage signals, but recent research shows that carotenoid-based signals may also play a role in aggressive signaling. We assessed the relative importance of melanin- and carotenoid-based plumage patches as agonistic signals in a small passerine, the golden whistler (Pachycephala pectoralis). Display signals in male golden whistlers include an unpigmented white throat patch, a carotenoid-based yellow breast and nape band, and a melanin-based black chin-stripe. We found that only the white throat patch..

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University of Melbourne Researchers