# Avian hissing sounds: occurrence, mechanism, ontogeny, function and phylogeny

**Authors:** Bert Thys, Marcel Eens

PMC · DOI: 10.1098/rsos.251298 · 2025-11-05

## TL;DR

Birds use hissing sounds for communication in various contexts like defense and mating, but the mechanisms and functions are not well understood.

## Contribution

The study identifies 86 avian families producing hissing sounds and explores their potential functions and phylogenetic significance.

## Key findings

- Hissing sounds are produced by at least 86 bird families across 34 orders.
- Hissing is primarily used in threat/defense displays but also in other social contexts.
- Research on avian hissing mechanisms and individual variation remains limited.

## Abstract

Sound production is widespread across the animal kingdom and can take many forms and serve various functions. A hissing sound is a non-vocal acoustic signal produced by forced air ventilation and is hypothesized to be a behavioural symplesiomorphy in Amniota. Yet, hissing sounds are typically associated with reptiles and have received comparably little research attention in birds. Here, we identified at least 86 families within 34 avian orders in which members produced hissing sounds. Despite being widespread, almost nothing is currently known about the mechanism(s) of avian hissing sound production. Functions of hissing signals were divided into broad categories based on the social/behavioural context in which they are typically expressed and most evidence pointed towards a main role in threat/defence displays towards predators. Yet, interesting examples exist where avian hissing signals are involved in agonistic interactions, parent-offspring communication, sibling competition, mating displays, pair communication and heterospecific eavesdropping. Our review also emphasizes that research on hissing sounds regarding individual variation, acoustic individuality, geographic variation and fitness consequences is still in its infancy. Overall, hissing sounds are widespread and can be involved in communication in many crucial aspects of avian life, thereby spanning various contemporary disciplines in behavioural and evolutionary ecology.

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** Serotonin transporter [NCBI Gene 101091163]
- **Diseases:** anxiety (MESH:D001007), agitation (MESH:D011595), reproductive failure (MESH:D051437), aggression (MESH:D010554), wheezing (MESH:D012135)
- **Chemicals:** citreoline trogon (-), serotonin (MESH:D012701), dopamine (MESH:D004298)
- **Species:** Perdix perdix (gray partridge, species) [taxon 9052], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Blattodea (cockroaches & termites, order) [taxon 85823], Casuariidae (cassowaries, family) [taxon 8785], Panthera tigris (tiger, species) [taxon 9694], Felis catus (cat, species) [taxon 9685], Anseranas semipalmata (magpie goose, species) [taxon 8851], Cygnus (swans, genus) [taxon 8867], Rheiformes (rheas, order) [taxon 8792], Alopochen aegyptiaca (Egyptian goose, species) [taxon 30382], Jynx torquilla (Eurasian wryneck, species) [taxon 189526], Struthio camelus (African ostrich, species) [taxon 8801], Cuculus canorus (common cuckoo, species) [taxon 55661], Falco (falcons, genus) [taxon 8952], Gallinago (genus) [taxon 107376], Elanus leucurus (species) [taxon 321063], Columbidae (pigeons, family) [taxon 8930], Pelecanidae (pelicans, family) [taxon 30444], Accipiter superciliosus (species) [taxon 56255], Giraffa camelopardalis (giraffe, species) [taxon 9894], Caprimulgus europaeus (Eurasian nightjar, species) [taxon 111811], Pygoscelis papua (Gentoo penguin, species) [taxon 30457], Laterallus spilonota (Galapagos rail, species) [taxon 2793981], Galloanserae (ducks, geese, chickens, fowl, quail, currasows and allies, superorder) [taxon 1549675], Opisthocomus hoazin (hoatzin, species) [taxon 30419], Cyanistes caeruleus (Blaumeise, species) [taxon 156563], Bonasa umbellus (ruffed grouse, species) [taxon 9000], Crocodylidae (crocodiles, family) [taxon 8493], Ploceidae (family) [taxon 1002748], Cuculiformes (cuckoos and others, order) [taxon 8940], Trogon citreolus (citreoline trogon, species) [taxon 243055], Picidae (woodpeckers, family) [taxon 9220], Piciformes (jacamars, order) [taxon 9219], Nycticorax nycticorax (black-crowned night-heron, species) [taxon 8901], Aepyceros melampus (impala, species) [taxon 9897], Cygnus columbianus (tundra swan, species) [taxon 110926], Centrocercus urophasianus (greater sage grouse, species) [taxon 9002], Apus caffer (species) [taxon 1002741], Gromphadorhina portentosa (giant Madagascaran hissing cockroach, species) [taxon 36953], Anser (geese, genus) [taxon 8842], Branta canadensis (Canada goose, species) [taxon 8853], Numida meleagris (helmeted guineafowl, species) [taxon 8996], Aegotheles cristatus (species) [taxon 48279], Lagopus lagopus (willow ptarmigan, species) [taxon 52650], Mephitidae (skunks, family) [taxon 119825], Nymphicus hollandicus (cockatiel, species) [taxon 13180], Athene cunicularia (burrowing owl, species) [taxon 194338], Columbiformes (pigeons and others, order) [taxon 8929], Anatidae (waterfowl, family) [taxon 8830], Dendrocopos major [taxon 137523], Troglodytinae (subfamily) [taxon 69501], Asio flammeus (short-eared owl, species) [taxon 56267], Lyrurus tetrix (black grouse, species) [taxon 1233216], Parus major (Great Tit, species) [taxon 9157], Burhinus oedicnemus (Eurasian thick-knee, species) [taxon 85105], Struthioniformes (ostriches, order) [taxon 8798], Gyps fulvus (Eurasian griffon, species) [taxon 36247], Bucerotiformes (hoopoes and others, order) [taxon 57379], Moschus moschiferus (Siberian musk deer, species) [taxon 68415], Coturnix coturnix (Common quail, species) [taxon 9091]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12585882/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12585882