The acoustic-competition hypothesis predicts that in areas with low species
diversity, bird song will vary more from one individual to another and the
song of each individual will be less complex than those of conspecifics in
areas with more species. The aim of this study was to investigate whether
this prediction also applies to the snow bunting (Plectrophenax nivalis), w
hich is the only passerine species that breeds regularly in Svalbard, where
as on the Scandinavian mainland it breeds sympatrically with several other
species. Songs of 22 and 19 male snow buntings from study areas at Longyear
byen in Svalbard and on the Varanger peninsula in northern Norway, respecti
vely, were analysed with respect to the number and type of syllables and mo
tifs, syllable and intersong diversity, song length, maximum, minimum, and
range of frequency, and sharing of song features between individuals. None
of the variables differed significantly between the two areas with respect
to song variation between individuals. It is suggested that this is related
primarily to the migratory and vagrant behaviour of the species, which is
thought to entail a considerable annual turnover in the breeding population
s in relation to the geographical origin of the birds. Songs were significa
ntly simpler in Svalbard than on the mainland only when complexity was meas
ured as syllable diversity. When it was measured in terms of diversity of s
ong motifs, an opposite, although insignificant, trend was found. The reaso
n for this contradictory tendency is discussed in relation to the problem o
f defining complexity and choosing relevant variables for assessing song co
mplexity. Individuals in both areas commonly shared syllables, but rarely m
otifs and song types. The snow buntings in Svalbard shared song features to
about the same extent as the birds on the mainland.