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- Title
Anuran accents: Continental‐scale citizen science data reveal spatial and temporal patterns of call variability.
- Authors
Weaver, Savannah J.; Callaghan, Corey T.; Rowley, Jodi J. L.
- Abstract
Many animals rely on vocal communication for mating advertisement, territorial displays, and warning calls. Advertisement calls are species‐specific, serve as a premating isolation mechanism, and reinforce species boundaries. Nevertheless, there is a great deal of interspecific variability of advertisement calls. Quantifying the variability of calls among individuals within a species and across species is critical to understand call evolution and species boundaries, and may build a foundation for further research in animal communication. However, collecting a large volume of advertisement call recordings across a large geographic area has traditionally posed a logistical barrier. We used data from the continental‐scale citizen science project FrogID to investigate the spatial and temporal patterns of call characteristics in six Australian frog species. We found intraspecific call variability in both call duration and peak frequency across species. Using resampling methods, we show that variability in call duration and peak frequency was related to the number of individuals recorded, the geographic area encompassed by those individuals, and the intra‐annual time difference between those recordings. We conclude that in order to accurately understand frog advertisement call variation, or "anuran accents," the number of individuals in a sample must be numerous (N ≥ 20), encompass a large geographic area relative to a species' range, and be collected throughout a species' calling season.
- Subjects
CITIZEN science; ANIMAL communication; SPATIAL variation; SPATIAL analysis (Statistics)
- Publication
Ecology & Evolution (20457758), 2020, Vol 10, Issue 21, p12115
- ISSN
2045-7758
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1002/ece3.6833