Listening to Nature’s Divas: what female songsters have to tell us
Speaker:  Dr. Karan Odom 

Monday, November 8, 2021, 7:30pm EDT
Free and open to the public!
Register for this Zoom Webinar at: https://tinyurl.com/cbc2021-11

(Or go to www.cayugabirdclub.org/webinars to register for the zoom link).

Most bird enthusiasts are familiar with the intricate, beautiful songs of male 
songbirds. However, it is less well known that females of many bird species 
also sing. While male songbirds sing to attract mates or defend territories, 
the reasons that females sing can be much broader, including competing for 
year-round resources for herself and her young. However, there is still a lot 
to learn about the extent of differences between male and female songs, the 
reasons that female songbirds sing, and the evolutionary pressures that led 
female songbirds to sing in the first place. Dr. Karan Odom will provide a 
glimpse of the world’s diversity of female bird songs and explain what these 
natural divas have to tell us.

About the Speaker: Dr. Karan Odom is a behavioral ecologist interested in how 
animals evolved their often complex behaviors. She is especially interested in 
the evolution of elaborate bird songs in female as well as male songbirds. She 
combines phylogenetic comparative methods with field studies in order to tease 
apart the evolutionary processes responsible for the biogeographical patterns 
we see in female and male song today. Karan is currently a postdoctoral 
researcher at the University of Maryland, College Park, and recently completed 
a postdoc at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. Karan received her Ph.D. at the 
University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC) studying male and female song 
in troupials, a tropical oriole in Puerto Rico, and her masters at the 
University of Windsor in Ontario studying the function and geographic variation 
in Barred Owl duets. Karan also runs a citizen science project (the Female Bird 
Song Project – www.femalebirdsong.org), encouraging wildlife enthusiasts to 
help document the understudied singing behaviors of female songbirds.

Dr. Karan Odom with a Troupial.
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