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- Title
The relative value of call embellishment in túngara frogs.
- Authors
Baugh, Alexander; Ryan, Michael
- Abstract
Facultative traits that have evolved under sexual selection, such as the acoustic ornaments present in the advertisement signals of male túngara frogs ( Physalaemus pustulosus), offer a unique opportunity to examine selection for trait exaggeration with a focus on individual differences amongst signalers. By contrast, many studies of mate choice use experimental designs that obscure the inter-individual variation amongst signalers available for selection to act on-through the use of 'typical' or average signals from the population. Here, we use dichotomous female phonotaxis choice tests to determine how the value of male call embellishment varies across 20 individual males frogs recorded from the wild-a sample which captures the acoustic diversity present in the population. We tested 20 females for each male call pair (i.e., 400 females). The results show widespread preference amongst females for ornamented calls ('whine-chucks') over simple calls ('whines'), yet also demonstrate substantial variation in the relative benefits for individual male frogs-some males enjoy appreciable benefits by using ornaments while others (30% of males in this study) do not. We also show that the relative amplitude of the chuck to the whine correlates positively with the value of call elaborations across these 20 males. Finally, by manipulating the relative amplitude of whines and chucks using both natural and synthetic calls, we demonstrate directly that this single call parameter is key to determining the relative value of call elaborations across males.
- Subjects
PHYSALAEMUS pustulosus; ANIMAL courtship; SEXUAL selection; ANIMAL sounds; PHYSALAEMUS; ANIMAL populations; DIMORPHISM in animals; MULTIVARIATE analysis; BEHAVIOR
- Publication
Behavioral Ecology & Sociobiology, 2011, Vol 65, Issue 2, p359
- ISSN
0340-5443
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s00265-010-1053-6