A rapid, invisible tap dance performed by courting songbirds may bring good vibrations to the search for a mate.
With the help of high-speed video,
researchers from Hokkaido University in Japan and the Max Planck
Institute for Ornithology in Germany have discovered that blue-capped
cordon-bleu songbirds (Uraeginthus cyanocephalus) perform
foot-stomping step dances during their courtship displays that are too
quick to view with the naked eye. Because the birds only start tapping
when their potential mates are on the same perch, the study authors
think the dancers might punctuate the display with pleasing sounds or
vibrations.Blue-capped cordon-bleus are colorful East African birds with peach-and-white bellies and powder-blue chests and heads. They are monogamous, and both males and females dance, bob and sing when courting, all while holding a piece of nesting material aloft in their beaks. [Video: Watch the Tap-Dancing Birds in Action]
The new study, published today (Nov. 19) in the journal Scientific Reports, is the first to observe the rapid tap dancing. Researchers paired off eight female and eight male birds in cages and recorded their behaviors for 2 hours with high-speed video. In total, seven males and four females did courtship dances during the observation.
Both males and females paired their head-bobbing dance with fancy
footwork, the researchers found. Males danced more often, bobbed more
quickly and took more steps than females, but otherwise the choreography
was similar between the sexes.
The birds tapped faster when sharing a perch with the object of their
affection, perhaps as a way to add tactile vibrations to their otherwise
visual and auditory display. Unlike humans, the birds might be able to
see the footwork as well, the researchers wrote.
"A next step in the study of blue-capped cordon-bleus courtship display
should be to investigate how singing, bobbing and stepping behaviors
are coordinated within in dividuals and between partners," they wrote.
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