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Lateralization of bird song

Passerine birds produce song through the vocal organ, the syrinx, which is composed of bilaterally symmetric halves located where the trachea separates into the two bronchi. Using endoscopic techniques, it has been observed that song is produced by air passing between a set of medial and lateral labia on each side of the syrinx.[1] Song is produced bilaterally, in both halves, through each separate set of labia unless air is prevented from flowing through one side of the syrinx. Birds regulate the airflow through the syrinx with muscles—M. syringealis dorsalis and M. tracheobronchialis dorsalis—that control the medial and lateral labia in the syrinx, whose action may close off airflow.[2] Song may, hence, be produced unilaterally through one side of the syrinx when the labia are closed in the opposite side.

  1. ^ Larsen, O.N.; Goller, F. (2002), "Direct observation of syringeal muscle function in songbirds and a parrot", J. Exp. Biol., 205(Pt 1) (Pt 1): 25–35, doi:10.1242/jeb.205.1.25, PMID 11818409
  2. ^ Suthers, R.A. (1997), "Peripheral control and lateralization of birdsong", J. Neurobiol., 33 (5): 632–652, doi:10.1002/(SICI)1097-4695(19971105)33:5<632::AID-NEU10>3.0.CO;2-B, PMID 9369464

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