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001        AA00000245_00001
005        20200914083155.0
006        m^^^^^o^^^^^^^^^^^
007        cr^^n^---ma^mp
008        200913n^^^^^^^^xx^^^^^^s^^^^^^^^^^^eng^d
245 00 |a A Method for Comparing Song Repertoires in Urban vs. Rural Northern Cardinals |h [electronic resource].
260        |c 9/13/2020.
300        |a Research Poster with attached Abstract
520 3    |a Anthropogenic noise may force animals to adjust aspects of their vocalizations like frequency, syllable usage, and speed. The impacts of human noise pollution must be studied in order to mitigate possible negative effects in the future. Northern Cardinals (Cardinalis cardinalis) are an ideal subject because they have a song that is masked by anthropogenic noise like traffic and human speech, and frequently rely on their song to intimidate other males, claim a territory, or attract a female. Previous studies have shown that males in urban areas that sing at higher frequencies claim better territories than competing males, while males in rural areas that sing lower, simpler songs claim better territories than their competitors. While a change in frequency in urban vs. rural areas has been studied, a difference in the size of song repertoire between the two habitats, which on average spans between 8-12 songs, has not. We studied the effect of anthropogenic noise on the size of song repertoires of two separate populations of cardinals from urban (Barry Park, Syracuse) and rural (Rice Creek Field Station, Oswego) areas using automatic recording units (ARU) placed on male territories. The ARUs recorded 30 hours of audio from each territory of 11 males at Rice Creek Field Station and 12 males at Barry Park. Each bird’s audio recordings will be separately analyzed using Kaleidoscope Pro, a program that can be trained to detect different cardinal song types. Song types will be differentiated based on syllable type/usage and trill type/usage. Preliminary results have yielded a male from Barry Park singing 12 song types, and a male from Rice Creek Field Station singing 7 song types. Future analysis will consist of building song repertoires for each recorded cardinal, comparing repertoire size, and analyzing the impact a change on repertoire size has on male fitness.
533        |a Electronic reproduction. |c SUNY Oswego Institutional Repository, |d 2020. |f (Oswego Digital Library) |n Mode of access: World Wide Web. |n System requirements: Internet connectivity; Web browser software.
535 1    |a SUNY Oswego Institution.
541        |a Collected for SUNY Oswego Institutional Repository by the online self-submittal tool. Submitted by Brooke Goodman.
650        |a biology.
650        |a Northern Cardinal.
650        |a ornithology.
650        |a zoology.
720        |a Brooke Goodman.
720        |a Daniel T. Baldassarre.
830    0 |a Oswego Digital Library.
830    0 |a SUNY Oswego Scholarly and Creative Works.
830    0 |a Summer 2020 Scholarly and Creative Activities Symposium.
852        |a OswegoDL |c SUNY Oswego Scholarly and Creative Works
856 40 |u https://digitallibrary.oswego.edu/AA00000245/00001 |y Electronic Resource
992 04 |a https:/digitallibrary.oswego.edu/content/AA/00/00/02/45/00001/NOCA poster abstract FINAL_docxthm.jpg
997        |a SUNY Oswego Scholarly and Creative Works


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