Mice Serenade Mates With Complex Tunes, Study Suggests

<< Back to Page 1   Page 2 of 2

"Whether it's an attribute or a deficiency, the mouse song differs [from birds']," he said. "It seems a bit more experimental and not as stereotyped."

Singing for Sex

Male mice may be inspired to sing by the same drive that biologists believe fuels many birds' crooning—sex.

"Birdsong is used for any number of functions, but generally it is related to breeding," said Christopher Sturdy, an animal behavior expert at the University of Alberta in Edmonton. "Song is used mainly to attract and maintain females, to keep other males away, and to propagate the genes"

Holy, the study co-author, said, "I'd guess that these songs play a role in courtship, but studies would have to be done to acquire any degree of certainty."

Jill Soha, curator of the Borror Laboratory of Bioacoustics at the Ohio State University Museum of Biological Diversity, says that mouse songs are intriguingly complex.

"This discovery is striking, because it shows that mice might communicate using complex vocalizations previously unknown in this species," she said. "Finding out how these sounds are used will be an exciting next step."

One future test could involve playing recorded male songs to female mice and observing any behavioral changes. Manipulating those songs could provide a key to understanding which aspects of song trigger a reaction, if any, in the opposite sex. It's also not known if female mice sing.

Schooled in Song?

Many researchers will be keen to learn if mice display definitive evidence of an ability called "vocal learning," which allows some species to imitate and replicate sounds.

"What sets songbirds—[as well as bats and some marine mammals]—apart from many other animals is that they seem to acquire their learned vocal signals in a way that is similar to how humans acquire theirs," Sturdy, the University of Alberta biologist, explained.

"It's dependent on them being exposed to a tutor, like their parent or another animal. It has to happen at the right period in life—[humans] can learn second languages later in life, but we're not nearly as good at it."

The process of vocal learning is important for humans and songbirds. Isolated young of both species will not vocalize normally as adults.

Other species, including nonhuman primates, do not seem to learn vocalization in this way but have their various barks and growls hard-wired from birth.

If mice are vocal learners, they could become an exciting tool for studying the genetic codes that grant the ability to some species.

"One thing it could really do is give us a handle on the genetic underpinnings of language," Sturdy speculated.

"If you had a mammal that showed vocal learning, then you could do genetic manipulations and compare them with human genetic abnormalities to study the effects that they have on human language."

Free E-Mail News Updates
Sign up for our Inside National Geographic newsletter. Every two weeks we'll send you our top stories and pictures (see sample).

<< Back to Page 1   Page 2 of 2


SOURCES AND RELATED WEB SITES

ADVERTISEMENT

NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC'S PHOTO OF THE DAY

NEWS FEEDS     After installing a news reader, click on this icon to download National Geographic News's XML/RSS feed.   After installing a news reader, click on this icon to download National Geographic News's XML/RSS feed.

Get our news delivered directly to your desktop—free.
How to Use XML or RSS

National Geographic Daily News To-Go

Listen to your favorite National Geographic news daily, anytime, anywhere from your mobile phone. No wires or syncing. Download Stitcher free today.
Click here to get 12 months of National Geographic Magazine for $15.