Democracy Dies in Darkness

‘Cock-a-doodle-doo!’ What really makes a rooster cry out?

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March 25, 2013 at 3:40 p.m. EDT
Japanese researchers show that the bird’s famed call is not driven by the sun but by an internal clock. (JAMES STEIDL)

‘Cock-a-doodle-doo!’ Study reveals what roosters have to crow about.

Although the rooster’s strident wake-up call just before sunrise feels as regular as an alarm clock, the evidence that the birds are somehow driven to herald the dawn has long been anecdotal. After all, a rooster is rarely shy about making his presence known regardless of the time of day.

Now, Japanese scientists have quite literally shed light on the phenomenon. To see whether roosters simply crow in response to external stimuli or according to a circadian rhythm — an internally driven, cyclical pattern of behavior that occurs over a 24-hour period — the team put one group of birds into a room with continuously dim lights and tracked the birds' crowing over the course of a month. Even in the absence of a daily cycle of light and dark, the authors report in Current Biology, the roosters continued to crow near dawn, suggesting that the birds' racket is indeed controlled by an internal clock. However, over time their crows became more scattered, suggesting that the rhythm eventually faded as they adjusted to a new regime of perpetual twilight.