Artículos de revistas
Geographic variation in the matching between call characteristics and tympanic sensitivity in the Weeping lizard
Fecha
2021Registro en:
Ecology and Evolution. 2021;11:18633–18650.
10.1002/ece3.8469
Autor
Labra, Antonieta
Reyes Olivares, Claudio
Moreno Gómez, Felipe Nicolás
Velásquez, Nelson A,
Penna Varela, Mario Claudio
Délano Reyes, Paul Hinckley
Narins, Peter M.
Institución
Resumen
Effective communication requires a match among signal characteristics, environmental
conditions, and receptor tuning and decoding. The degree of matching, however,
can vary, among others due to different selective pressures affecting the communication
components. For evolutionary novelties, strong selective pressures are likely
to act upon the signal and receptor to promote a tight match among them. We test
this prediction by exploring the coupling between the acoustic signals and auditory
sensitivity in Liolaemus chiliensis, the Weeping lizard, the only one of more than 285
Liolaemus species that vocalizes. Individuals emit distress calls that convey information
of predation risk to conspecifics, which may respond with antipredator behaviors
upon hearing calls. Specifically, we explored the match between spectral characteristics
of the distress calls and the tympanic sensitivities of two populations separated
by more than 700 km, for which previous data suggested variation in their distress
calls. We found that populations differed in signal and receptor characteristics and
that this signal variation was explained by population differences in body size. No
precise match occurred between the communication components studied, and populations
differed in the degree of such correspondence. We suggest that this difference
in matching between populations relates to evolutionary processes affecting the
Weeping lizard distress calls.