I don’t know if you’ve read this report already, but it says that the best male zebra singers are more intelligent and more likely to get the girls of the colony. Apparently, the more complicated the song of the zebra, the more complicated its brain’s neuron connections are, and in the language of mutation, that’s a good thing. It looks like the tendency of all species is to evolve into a more intelligent form, such that survival and adaptation skills become easy.
What could this mean to our hobby? For ages, breeders have been pairing birds to produce color variations. This is specially true for gouldians and zebras, of which we usually ignore the quality of the male’s song. For canaries however, it is usual that the juvenile will get its song from other canaries, primarily the father. Some canaries are therefore bred because of the duration and quality of their songs. It is therefore easier to choose to breed better singers in canaries, as studies have proven that they are actually more intelligent than the rest.

Here’s an excerpt from that report:
Why do females of some avian species choose suitors with the most elaborate courtship songs?
Simple: Fancy singers have more elaborate brain structures (to learn singing and other life skills), brains that the females hope their offspring will inherit.
Reports linking sexual selection on the basis of song and the “heritability” of bigger brain structures in three different bird species - European sedge warblers, cowbirds and zebra finches - were published this year by Cornell scientists.
While the Cornell scientists hesitate to extend their avian neuroscience discoveries to the evolution and amorous affairs of homo sapiens, the leader of the studies says it helps to think in human motivational terms.
“An elaborate bird song is like a Grand Cherokee in the driveway or an M.D. after the name - a kind of shorthand for all the desirable qualities that a female wants in a mate and wants passed along to the children,” said Timoth DeVoogd, professor of psychology and neurobiology and behavior at Cornell. “Of course these birds are not scholars of evolutionary theory. They don’t think Darwin’s principle of sexual selection when they make up their minds about which male sings best.
“Nevertheless, their choices will have an immediate impact on the success of their parenting and, in a longer-term, evolutionary sense, on the success and survivability of their kin for generations to come.”
So, when are you going to start breeding those singers?




3 users commented in " CNN on Zebra Finch: Bird Quality is in the Singing "
Follow-up comment rss or Leave a TrackbackOne of the reasons why I started collecting Zebra finch mutations was because of their song or chirp. It’s kind of difficult for me to hear single male singing now because I have over 60 pairs now. One thing I noticed is how all of them would suddenly stop singing like they saw a ghost then one of them would sing again then the others would follow. Another thing I noticed is that every 5:30AM, like an alarm clock, all of them will start singing.
5:30 am, is that when the sun usually rises these days? I on the other hand notice that my zebra pair sings and chirp, say when I arrive and start making noise with the doors. I think the moment that they sense somebody around(esp. me hehe) they try to communicate. The same does not hold true for my canary however. She has her own schedule of chirping.
what’s with the sched of their chirping?? I would really like to know, mine gets all so chirpy when clock strikes around 5:30am to 6 too! O__o
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