| Literature DB >> 22970154 |
Matti Michael Rothbart1, Ralf Matthias Hennig.
Abstract
In Europe, several species of crickets are available commercially as pet food. Here we investigated the calling song and phonotactic selectivity for sound patterns on the short and long time scales for one such a cricket, Gryllus spec., available as "Gryllus assimilis", the Steppengrille, originally from Ecuador. The calling song consisted of short chirps (2-3 pulses, carrier frequency: 5.0 kHz) emitted with a pulse period of 30.2 ms and chirp rate of 0.43 per second. Females exhibited high selectivity on both time scales. The preference for pulse period peaked at 33 ms which was higher then the pulse period produced by males. Two consecutive pulses per chirp at the correct pulse period were already sufficient for positive phonotaxis. The preference for the chirp pattern was limited by selectivity for small chirp duty cycles and for chirp periods between 200 ms and 500 ms. The long chirp period of the songs of males was unattractive to females. On both time scales a mismatch between the song signal of the males and the preference of females was observed. The variability of song parameters as quantified by the coefficient of variation was below 50% for all temporal measures. Hence, there was not a strong indication for directional selection on song parameters by females which could account for the observed mismatch. The divergence of the chirp period and female preference may originate from a founder effect, when the Steppengrille was cultured. Alternatively the mismatch was a result of selection pressures exerted by commercial breeders on low singing activity, to satisfy customers with softly singing crickets. In the latter case the prominent divergence between male song and female preference was the result of domestication and may serve as an example of rapid evolution of song traits in acoustic communication systems.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22970154 PMCID: PMC3436750 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0043975
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Morphological measures of the Steppengrille (G. spec./assimilis).
| hind femur | Pronotum | Cephalon | wing | file | ||||||
| length [mm] | width [mm] | length [mm] | width [mm] | width [mm] | length [mm] | width [mm] | width w/o side | length [mm] | teeth | teeth/mm |
| 10,05 | 3,32 | 3,45 | 5,49 | 4,95 | 13,18 | 6,93 | 4,63 | 3,44 | 137,1 | 45,80 |
| 0,64 | 0,25 | 0,28 | 0,43 | 0,39 | 1,15 | 0,46 | 0,33 | 0,32 | 16,7 | 3,67 |
n = 20, data as mean and standard deviation.
Figure 1Properties of the pulse filter of females of Steppengrille G. spec./assimilis in comparison with song data.
a Envelope of the song pattern of a male (inset: expanded chirp). b Transfer function of the phonotactic response for females to envelope patterns with different modulation frequencies. Presented stimuli consisted of continuous, sinusoidal modulations (open circles) or groups i.e. chirps of sinusoidal pulses (open squares, presented with a chirp duration of 100 ms and chirp period of 500 ms). Envelopes of all stimuli were filled with a carrier of 5.0 kHz. For comparison the pulse filter of the cricket, G. bimaculatus, is shown (gray line). c Selectivity of females for stimuli with rectangular (open squares) or sinusoidal pulses (open diamonds) presented in chirps as in a (pulse duty cycle of 0.5, chirp duration 100 ms, chirp period: 500 ms; for comparison the pulse filter of the cricket, G. bimaculatus, is also shown (gray line)). Histogram shows the distribution of pulse periods measured from individual male songs (c.f. table 2). d Response profile of females for patterns with different combinations of pulse and pause durations (stimuli consisted of chirps of 100 ms duration presented at a chirp period of 500 ms). Open squares indicate test stimuli with rectangular pulses, open circles refer to stimuli with sinusoidal pulses. e Pulse and pause durations (mean and standard deviation) from song patterns of individual males plotted within the response profile shown in d. Response ranges from d are shown for values of relative phonotaxis at 0.25 (blue line) and 0.75 (red line). f Responses of females to pulse patterns with different duty cycles tested with stimuli that contained only 2 (open circles) or 3 pulses per chirp (open squares) presented at a constant pulse period of 33 ms. For comparison responses of G. bimaculatus are indicated (gray line). The distribution of duty cycles measured from individual song data are shown as black bars. g Responses of females to pulse patterns with only 2 (open circles) or 3 pulses per chirp (open squares) presented at different pulse periods. Chirp period was kept constant at 500 ms. Responses to patterns with a constant chirp duration are shown for comparison (black circles, from c). For a pulse period of 25 ms the number of pulses in a chirp (2p, 3p and 4p) are indicated. Data is given as mean values and standard deviation. Gray stippled lines in panels b, c, f, g mark levels of significance, see methods.
Spectral and temporal measures of the songs of the Steppengrille (G. spec./assimilis), data from 34 males.
| carrier | pulse pattern | chirp pattern | ||||||||
| frequency [kHz] | pdur [ms] | ppau [ms] | pper [ms] | pDC | nr,P | Cdur [ms] | Cpau [ms] | Cper [ms] | CDC | |
| mean | 4,98 | 16,00 | 15,77 | 30,22 | 0,48 | 2,52 | 64,40 | 2274,0 | 2338,4 | 0,03 |
| sd | 0,29 | 3,62 | 4,81 | 3,98 | 0,11 | 0,38 | 12,52 | 608,1 | 612,6 | 0,01 |
| CV, inter | 5.8% | 22.6% | 30.5% | 13.2% | 22.9% | 15.0% | 19.4% | 26.7% | 26.2% | 33.0% |
| CV, intra | n.a. | 26.0% | 27.0% | 14.0% | 27.0% | 37.0% | 44.0% | 27.0% | 26.0% | 45.0% |
Values were corrected to a temperature of 25°C.
Explanation of terms: pdur: pulse duration, ppau: pause duration, pper: pulse period, pDC: pulse duty cycle (pdur/pper), nr,P: number of pulses per chirp, Cdur: chirp duration, Cpau: chirp pause, Cper: chirp period, CDC: chirp duty cycle (Cdur/Cper). CV, inter: coefficient of variation between individuals (sd/mean), CV, intra: mean of coefficient of variation measured for individual males. On average 138 pulses (range: 15–483) and 58 chirps (range: 7–186) were analyzed per individual male song.
Figure 2Properties of the chirp filter of females of the Steppengrille G. spec./assimilis in comparison with song data.
a Phonotactic response of females to patterns with different chirp periods for sets of stimuli with different chirp durations (CDUR). b Phonotactic response of females to patterns with different duty cycles of the chirp pattern (chirp period was kept constant at 500 ms; the top axis refers to the number of pulses in a stimulus). c Response profile of females for patterns with different combinations of chirp duration and chirp pause on a double logarithmic scale (tested stimuli are indicated by open squares, all stimuli contained pulse periods of 33 ms). d Phonotactic response of females to patterns with different chirp durations, but constant chirp periods of 500 ms (open circles; pulse period was kept constant at 33 ms). Scores of relative phonotaxis in response to different chirp durations without modulation by pulses are shown by open squares. Histogram shows the distribution of chirp durations measured from individual male songs (c.f. table 2). The response marked by an asterisk was significantly different from the silent (p<0,05), but not from the continuous tone control. Data is given as mean values and standard deviation. Gray stippled lines in panels a, b, d mark levels of significance, see methods.