Artículos de revistas
Frog call intensities and sound propagation in the South American temperate forest region
Fecha
1998Registro en:
Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, Volumen 42, Issue 6, 1998, Pages 371-381
03405443
10.1007/s002650050452
Autor
Penna Varela, Mario
Solís Muñoz, Rigoberto
Institución
Resumen
Sound pressure levels and the spectral structure of the advertisement calls of five species of frogs from the South American temperate austral forest were analyzed. Males of Eupsophus emiliopugini, Batrachyla antartandica and B. leptopus call from the ground in bogs, while males of Hylorina sylvatica and Pleurodema thaul call from the water surface in marshes. Calling males of the species from bogs and marshes spaced at average distances that were shorter and longer than 2 m, respectively. The properties of these habitats for sound propagation were evaluated by broadcasting pure tones, broadband noise and tape-recorded advertisement calls of the three species from bogs and of H. sylvatica. Excess attenuation and spectral degradation were higher for calls broadcast in bogs than in the marsh. The calls of B. antartandica and B. leptopus, with dominant frequencies of about 2 kHz, were more affected than those of E. emiliopugini and H. sylvatica, with dominant frequencies below 1.5 kHz. Th