Male Galápagos yellow warblers appear to be shifting their behavior and adjusting their calls in response to the din of ...
The Galápagos yellow warblers on the more populous island of Santa Cruz also increased the duration of their song when ...
For the study, researchers played bird songs from a speaker, simulating an intruder whilst simultaneously playing recorded ...
The Galápagos Islands, located over 500 miles off the coast of Ecuador, are considered a natural living laboratory due to the ...
Birds change their songs to be heard over the sound of automobile traffic, and when that doesn't work, they get aggressive. A new study in the journal Animal Behavior found that Yellow Warblers, which ...
Researchers found if external noise such as traffic interfered with the birdsong, it blocked their communication channel, ...
A new study has discovered that birds in the Galapagos Islands are changing their behavior due to traffic noise, with those frequently exposed to vehicles showing heightened levels of aggression.
Yellow Warblers that live close to roads in the Galápagos get more aggressive around traffic noises, per a new study ...
Humans aren’t the only ones who are prone to road rage. Scientists have found that certain songbirds in the Galapagos behave ...
Birds adjust their songs and territorial behavior to compete with traffic sounds, even in remote island environments.
The study flags new challenges for conservation as population growth brings humans and animals closer together. View on ...
Galápagos songbirds are changing their ways, getting bolder and singing louder, because of human noise. Warblers near roads ...