Artículos de revistas
Vocal responses of austral forest frogs to amplitude and degradation patterns of advertisement calls
Fecha
2017Registro en:
Behavioural Processes 140 (2017) 190–201
Autor
Penna Varela, Mario
Moreno Gómez, Felipe N.
Muñoz, Matías I.
Cisternas, Javiera
Institución
Resumen
Degradation phenomena affecting animal acoustic signals may provide cues to assess the distance of emitters.
Recognition of degraded signals has been extensively demonstrated in birds, and recently studies have also
reported detection of degraded patterns in anurans that call at or above ground level. In the current study we
explore the vocal responses of the syntopic burrowing male frogs Eupsophus emiliopugini and E. calcaratus from
the South American temperate forest to synthetic conspecific calls differing in amplitude and emulating
degraded and non-degraded signal patterns. The results show a strong dependence of vocal responses on signal
amplitude, and a general lack of differential responses to signals with different pulse amplitude modulation
depths in E. emiliopugini and no effect of relative amplitude of harmonics in E. calcaratus. Such limited
discrimination of signal degradation patterns from non-degraded signals is likely related to the burrowing habits
of these species. Shelters amplify outgoing and incoming conspecific vocalizations, but do not counteract signal
degradation to an extent comparable to calling strategies used by other frogs. The limited detection abilities and
resultant response permissiveness to degraded calls in these syntopic burrowing species would be advantageous
for animals communicating in circumstances in which signal alteration prevails.