Bird vocalization
Birds communicate using primarily visual and auditory signals. Signals can be interspecific (between species) and intraspecific (within species).
Birds sometimes use plumage to assess and assert social dominance, to display breeding condition in sexually selected species, or to make threatening displays, as in the Sunbittern's mimicry of a large predator to ward off hawks and protect young chicks.Variation in plumage also allows for the identification of birds, particularly between species. Visual communication among birds may also involve ritualised displays, which have developed from non-signalling actions such as preening, the adjustments of feather position, pecking, or other behaviour. These displays may signal aggression or submission or may contribute to the formation of pair-bonds.The most elaborate displays occur during courtship, where "dances" are often formed from complex combinations of many possible component movements;males' breeding success may depend on the quality of such displays.
| Red-billed Queleas, the most numerous species of bird, form enormous flocks—sometimes tens of thousands strong. |
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