| Literature DB >> 29225405 |
Longhui Zhao1,2, Bicheng Zhu1,2, Jichao Wang3, Steven E Brauth4, Yezhong Tang1, Jianguo Cui1.
Abstract
Many kinds of environmental noise can interfere with acoustic communication and efficient decision making in terrestrial species. Here we identified an exception to this generalization in a streamside species, the little torrent frog (Amolops torrentis) which communicates in a stream noise environment. To determine whether stream noise can act as a cue regarding the microhabitat characteristics of senders, we performed phonotaxis experiments using stimulus pairs constructed with synthetic male calls (high or low dominant frequency) and stream noise with varied signal-to-noise ratios. We found that females prefer calls with high amplitude stream noise added compared to those with low amplitude stream noise added for both high and low dominant frequency stimulus pairs; however, stream noise itself was not attractive in the absence of calls. These results show that stream noise can function as a cue that may be used by females for enhancing the attractiveness of calls. Stream noise associates closely with rocks, topographies and vegetation and may thus provide useful microhabitat information for signal receivers, thereby acting on sexual selection. These data therefore contribute to our understanding of how the perception of mate attractiveness in heterogeneous ecological environments can evolve.Entities:
Keywords: Amolops torrentis; Mate attractiveness; Microhabitat; Sexual selection; Sound communication
Year: 2017 PMID: 29225405 PMCID: PMC5711985 DOI: 10.1007/s10164-017-0515-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ethol ISSN: 0289-0771 Impact factor: 1.270
Fig. 1Waveforms (top panels) and spectrograms (bottom panels) of the six acoustic stimuli used in the female phonotaxis experiments. Experiment 1: a (HN), b (HL), c (HH); Experiment 2: d (LN), e (LL), f (LH). HN high dominant frequency call with no noise added, HL high dominant frequency call with low amplitude noise added, HH high dominant frequency call with high amplitude noise added, LN low dominant frequency call with no noise added, LL low dominant frequency call with low amplitude noise added, LH low dominant frequency call with high amplitude noise added
All eight stimulus pairs constructed in this study
| Stimulus pairs | Stimulus 1 | Stimulus 2 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Frequency type | Signal/noise | Frequency type | Signal/noise | |
| 1 | High-frequency | 8:1 | High-frequency | – |
| 2 | High-frequency | 2:1 | High-frequency | – |
| 3 | High-frequency | 2:1 | High-frequency | 8:1 |
| 4 | Low-frequency | 8:1 | Low-frequency | – |
| 5 | Low-frequency | 2:1 | Low-frequency | – |
| 6 | Low-frequency | 2:1 | Low-frequency | 8:1 |
| 7 | Running water | – | White noise | – |
| 8 | Running water | – | Silence | – |
Summary of outcomes from the phonotaxis tests of experiments 1–3
| Experiment | Test | Stimuli | Choices |
| ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | B | A | B | |||
| 1 | 1 | HL | HN | 22 | 20 | 0.663 |
| 2 | HH | HN | 19 | 22 | 0.508 | |
| 3 | HH | HL | 18 | 9 | 0.014 | |
| 2 | 4 | LL | LN | 19 | 22 | 0.508 |
| 5 | LH | LN | 20 | 22 | 0.663 | |
| 6 | LH | LL | 16 | 9 | 0.044 | |
| 3 | 7 | RW | WN | 20 | 20 | 1.000 |
| 8 | RW | S | 16 | 24 | 0.074 | |
The choices represent the number of females attracted to each stimulus in each experiment in each test. Statistical p values are the probability of rejecting the null hypothesis using the Pearson chi-square or Fisher’s exact tests
HN high dominant frequency call with no noise added, HL high dominant frequency call with low amplitude noise added, HH high dominant frequency call with high amplitude noise added, LN low dominant frequency call with no noise added, LL low dominant frequency call with low amplitude noise added, LH low dominant frequency call with high amplitude noise added, RW running water, S silence, WN white noise
Fig. 2Female response times in phonotaxis experiment 1 (Hsps 1–2, n = 146; Hsps 3, n = 38) and experiment 2 (Lsps 4–5, n = 159; Lsps 6, n = 38). Box plots show the median response with interquartile range and the 25th and 75th percentile. *p < 0.05. Hsps high-frequency stimulus pairs of experiment 1, Lsps low-frequency stimulus pairs of experiment 2
Fig. 3Proportions of females that met and did not meet the phonotaxis response criterion in the Hsps, Lsps and Rwsps experiments (Hsps, total n = 184; Lsps, total n = 197; Rwsps, total n = 171). *p < 0.05. n.s. not statistically significant, Hsps high-frequency stimulus pairs of experiment 1, Lsps low-frequency stimulus pairs of experiment 2, Rwsps the running water stimulus pairs of experiment 3