by Ruth Ann Grissom
7/26/2017
Since early May, a distinctive eastern towhee has frequented my backyard in Charlotte. The typical song of this common species can be translated as โDrink your teeea!โ This empathic burst of notes ends with a trill. Sometimes the song is shortened to an assertive two-note command. โDrink tea!โ The towhee in my backyard sounds as if he suffers from a stutter. To my ear, he seems to be saying, โDrink, drink, drink your tea!โ Poor little fella, it seems heโs misplaced his trill.
Birdsong was once believed to be innate, but ingenious studies have proven that quite a bit of learning is involved. Early research concluded birds simply imitate the songs of their father and other nearby males. More recent work has shown that some birds have a lifelong ability to adapt their songs. This can give them an advantage in a variety of settings. Urban birds have been forced to tweak their songs so they can be heard over the din of the human environment. A UC-Davis study found a common yellowthroat can sing up to 2000 variations in a single day.
The common yellowthroatโs song is also known for its regional variations. These differences are known as dialects. According to Don Stapโs excellent and exhaustive book Birdsong, โCarolina wrens in Ohio sing their songs faster than Carolina wrens in Florida.โ Apparently, Homo sapiens isnโt the only species that exhibits a Southern drawl.
In the UK, an effort is underway to document the regional dialects of the yellowhammer. This species occurs widely across the country, but individual birds tend to remain in the same location throughout their lives. These factors help produce a โthickโ accent, just as they would in humans. If these dialects become too thick, experts believe the differences might impact a birdโs ability to breed with a partner from another area. This could eventually lead to the development of distinct sub-species. In fact, some scientists speculate regional variations in song could be an indication of evolution at work before our very eyes, or in this case, ears.
The Cornell Lab of Ornithology notes that the towheeโs song sometimes begins with more than one โdrink,โ but Iโve never heard that variation in the Piedmont. (Itโs also worth noting the example on their website, which was recorded in Maryland, sounds less melodious than our local birds.) Was the towhee in my backyard trying to distinguish himself from his rivals? Had a stranger come to town? Perhaps he was a juvenile who hadnโt yet nailed down his delivery? I posed these questions to bird guru John Gerwin, ornithologist at the N.C. Museum of Natural Sciences. He has heard towhees with a similar song in Raleigh โ and observed that we donโt know nearly enough about towhee migration โ but he agreed it could be a juvenile.
Stap addresses this issue. Soon after fledging, he says, birds begin to babble incoherently, like a human baby. This subsong, which often continues throughout the birdโs first summer, contains elements of the standard song, but theyโre โjumbled and incomplete.โ Thatโs a great description of the towhee in my backyard. Assuming the towhee survives the winter, Stap says heโll begin to practice again as the days grow longer, moving into a phase known as plastic song. By the time breeding season rolls around, he ought to be in command of his full song, signaling heโs ready to defend a territory and attract a mate.
The question remains: Why do birds sing? Is it only in service of pro-creation or is it possible birds sometimes simply enjoy belting out a perfect song? In terms of evolution, thatโs a risky behavior, an expenditure of valuable time and energy. Since birds canโt share their motives on a questionnaire, scientists have devised studies to measure levels of dopamine and opioids related to singing. (These neurochemicals are associated with satisfaction and pleasure.) Some results suggest birds do in fact experience an intrinsic pleasure from singing certain types of songs.
Until we know more, perhaps that question is best left to poets like Mary Oliver. In an interview with Krista Tippett on the podcast On Being, she discusses her admiration for the Sufi poet Rumi. A Muslim scholar, he once observed, โThere are hundreds of ways to kneel and kiss the ground.โ ย Toward the end of Oliverโs poem I Happened to Be Standing, she writes, โBut I thought, of the wrenโs singing, what could this be//If it isnโt a prayer?โ
Hear Ruth Ann’s backyard towhee with his stutter:
To hear examples of the eastern towheeโs song and calls, go to https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Eastern_Towhee/sounds
Test your ability to visualize birdsong at https://academy.allaboutbirds.org/features/bird-song-hero/bird-song-hero-tutorial