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- Title
Strong responsiveness to noise interference in an anuran from the southern temperate forest.
- Authors
Penna, Mario; Zúñiga, Daniel
- Abstract
Animals adopt different strategies to communicate by means of sound in noisy environments. Some animals increase, while others decrease, their vocal activity in the presence of interference. Anuran amphibians from diverse latitudes exhibit both kinds of responses. Recent studies have shown that males of Batrachyla taeniata and Batrachyla antartandica from the temperate austral forest do not call in response to the presentation of advertisement calls of sympatric congeneric species, but their responsiveness to other kinds of interference has not been tested. To explore the diversity in responsiveness to acoustic intrusion in a single species, we exposed males of B. taeniata to prolonged prerecorded natural abiotic noises of wind, creek, and rain and to a band-pass noise centered at 2,000 Hz, at 67 dB sound pressure level (SPL). The subjects drastically increased their call rate when exposed to all four sounds. Frogs also responded by augmenting their vocal activity to exposures of band-pass noise at increasing intensities (55-79 dB SPL). The increase in vocal activity in response to noise is strong relative to those of other anurans from the temperate forest studied previously under similar exposures. These results reveal a remarkable activation of vocal response to acoustic interference of continuous abiotic noise, which would allow compensating for limitations in the active communication space under background sounds. This strategy contrasts with the decrease in vocal output amid interference from heterospecific signals reported formerly for this frog, a tactic that would restrict energy expenditure to relevant acoustic competition with conspecifics.
- Subjects
ANURA behavior; ANIMAL sounds; FOREST ecology; INTERFERENCE (Sound); LATITUDE; SPECIES; NOISE measurement; BANDPASS filters
- Publication
Behavioral Ecology & Sociobiology, 2014, Vol 68, Issue 1, p85
- ISSN
0340-5443
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s00265-013-1625-3