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Good vibrations get a club-winged manakin going

When it comes to wooing a mate, one bird finds it pays to make like a grasshopper
[video_player id=鈥漻uv27oGO鈥漖Video: Vibrating feathers produce courtship song
Vibrate and mate
Vibrate and mate
(Image: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jjbirder">John Jackson</a>)

CLUB-shaped feathers are no good for flying, but when it comes to courting they can be music to a mate鈥檚 ears.

The irregular structure of these heavy, specialised feathers is responsible for creating the club-winged manakin鈥檚 unique high-pitched courtship song, say and colleagues at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York. The songbird () uses these feathers for stridulation, a rubbing mechanism commonly used by insects such as crickets.

One feather on each wing has seven ridges along its central vane. The stiff, curved tip of an adjacent feather strikes the ridges every time the bird raises it wings over its back and shakes its feathers. The repeated striking causes adjacent clubbed feathers to vibrate at high speed.

The mechanism was first proposed after viewing slow-motion footage of male courting behaviour. To find out whether the vibrations produced the manakin鈥檚 mating song, Bostwick鈥檚 team shook the birds鈥 seven club-shaped secondary feathers at varying rates. Vibrating the sixth and seventh feathers together at 1500 cycles per second produced the correct tone. The other feathers did not produce the noise, suggesting they are instead responsible for radiating the sound ().

Although many insects do this, manakins are unique among vertebrates in using stridulation, says Bostwick.

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