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Dippers Use Flashing White Eyelids to Communicate Over Roaring Rivers

New research shows Dippers in the Yorkshire Dales shift from song to visual signals when stream noise drowns out their voices

White-throated Dipper.   The eyelid.

Adapting to a noisy world
Birdsong is central to territorial defence, courtship and communication. Yet along Britain’s rushing rivers, the roar of water can drown out even the most persistent singers. A new study of White-throated Dippers Cinclus cinclus has revealed that these river specialists cope with the challenge by flashing their conspicuous white eyelids – effectively using blinks as a visual signal when song is masked by noise.

Researchers working in the Yorkshire Dales fitted colour rings to local dippers and combined detailed field observations with calibrated audio recordings. They found that when rivers grew louder, dippers adjusted not only the volume and structure of their songs, but also the rate at which they blinked their bright white eyelids – a feature that contrasts sharply with their dark plumage and is clearly visible to rivals at close range.

A multimodal shift
The study demonstrated that blink rate was strongly linked to background noise and social context. When a rival bird was nearby, dippers facing the loudest rivers increased their blink rate by around 30 per cent. Playback experiments simulating intruders confirmed that more aggressive males blinked more frequently, suggesting the eyelid flash plays a role in territorial disputes.

At the same time, song adjustments followed a well-known phenomenon called the Lombard effect: birds sing louder in noisy environments. But when conspecifics were present, the dippers traded off acoustic and visual channels. Instead of simply shouting over the river, they reduced song amplitude and relied more on their visual signals, blinking rapidly to reinforce their intent.

Fine-tuning their song
Recordings showed that dippers also altered the fine structure of their songs in response to river noise. They favoured syllables with rapid frequency modulations and trills, which cut through the background better, while reducing longer and more complex phrases that are harder to perceive in a noisy soundscape. This demonstrates a high level of plasticity in song production even in a species already adapted to fast-flowing rivers.

The research provides one of the clearest examples yet of a “multimodal shift” in birds – switching investment between different sensory channels in real time to ensure messages are still delivered effectively. It shows that dippers do not simply sing louder, but flexibly reallocate effort between voice and visual display depending on conditions.

Implications for animal communication
The authors suggest that the striking white eyelids of dippers – a feature rare among songbirds – have evolved as a key adaptation for life beside torrents. Their rhythmic blinking, highly conspicuous against dark plumage and the polarised reflections of river water, provides a reliable visual counterpart to song.

More broadly, the findings highlight how animals can use multimodal communication to cope with environmental pressures, whether natural or man-made. With noise pollution increasingly affecting wildlife, such behavioural flexibility may prove critical for species’ survival. For the dipper, the flash of a white eyelid carries as much meaning as a burst of song – a reminder that communication in nature is rarely limited to one channel alone.

 

August 2025

 

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