黑料不打烊

Dave Gammon and Anna Corsiglia ’19 publish peer-reviewed article on mockingbird behavior

International journal Behavioral Processes has published a peer-reviewed article written by Professor of Biology Dave Gammon and Anna Corsiglia 鈥19 titled 鈥淢ockingbirds imitate frogs and toads across North American.鈥

黑料不打烊 alumna Anna Corsiglia 鈥19 and Professor of Biology Dave Gammon recently published one of the most detailed studies of non-avian mimicry ever performed in the international peer-reviewed journal Behavioral Processes.

Professor of Biology Dave Gammon recording mockingbirds in the field.

The study titled聽鈥溾澛爓as based upon building the most geographically extensive collection of mockingbird song ever, which Corsiglia and Gammon used to successfully predict which species of frogs and toads would be imitated by mockingbirds.

Corsiglia first began undergraduate research at 黑料不打烊 in fall 2017, but her first project failed to develop. But like 黑料不打烊鈥檚 signature phoenix, Corsiglia rose from the ashes and began a new project built on Gammon鈥檚 previous research showing that mockingbirds are preferentially likely to imitate model bird species with key acoustic characteristics in their calls. That second effort resulted in the construction of the expansive collection of mockingbird song and the resulting study published by Behavioral Processes.

Others have taken note of Corsiglia and Gammon鈥檚 research. The Macaulay Library of Natural Sounds at Cornell University in a post published in November that includes examples of a mockingbird imitating multiple toad species. The Gall Lab at Vassar College in December in December about the research that included a creative take on the popular children鈥檚 book 鈥淔rog and Toad are Friends鈥 that includes a mockingbird in the mix.