Roosters crow in order of seniority - the top cock announcing daybreak while juniors patiently wait their turn, a new study revealing a long-guarded secret of chickendom shows.
We are all familiar with that first pre-dawn "cock-a-doodle-doo", quickly followed by others within hearing distance. But how do cockerels decide who goes first?
They pull rank, according to a set of experiments with captive birds reported in the journal Scientific Reports.
"The top-ranking rooster always started to crow first, followed by its subordinates, in descending order of social rank," wrote the Japanese authors of the study. "When the top-ranking rooster was physically removed from a group, the second-ranking rooster initiated crowing."
Crowing is thought to be a means for cockerels to advertise their territory - limiting the risk of surprise, potentially aggressive encounters.