Parental incubation exchange in a territorial bird species involves sex-specific signalling.
Martin SládečekEva VozabulováKateřina BrynychováMiroslav E ŠálekPublished in: Frontiers in zoology (2019)
Our results suggest that (1) that the incubating parent can communicate with the non-incubating partner using sex-specific behavioural signals, and this helps to synchronize parental exchange on the nest, (2) this signalling may combine acoustic and visual cues, and (3) the efficiency of this signalling might influence the overall nest attendance. The presumption that the repertoire of behavioural signals during reproduction will be much more complex in territorial species that are capable of continuous communication between the partners during the incubation period should be further tested.