Divergence of Acoustic Signals in a Widely Distributed Frog: Relevance of Inter-Male Interactions
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2014Metadata
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Velásquez, Nelson A.
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Divergence of Acoustic Signals in a Widely Distributed Frog: Relevance of Inter-Male Interactions
Abstract
Divergence of acoustic signals in a geographic scale results from diverse evolutionary forces acting in parallel and affecting
directly inter-male vocal interactions among disjunct populations. Pleurodema thaul is a frog having an extensive latitudinal
distribution in Chile along which males’ advertisement calls exhibit an important variation. Using the playback paradigm we
studied the evoked vocal responses of males of three populations of P. thaul in Chile, from northern, central and southern
distribution. In each population, males were stimulated with standard synthetic calls having the acoustic structure of local
and foreign populations. Males of both northern and central populations displayed strong vocal responses when were
confronted with the synthetic call of their own populations, giving weaker responses to the call of the southern population.
The southern population gave stronger responses to calls of the northern population than to the local call. Furthermore,
males in all populations were stimulated with synthetic calls for which the dominant frequency, pulse rate and modulation
depth were varied parametrically. Individuals from the northern and central populations gave lower responses to a synthetic
call devoid of amplitude modulation relative to stimuli containing modulation depths between 30–100%, whereas the
southern population responded similarly to all stimuli in this series. Geographic variation in the evoked vocal responses of
males of P. thaul underlines the importance of inter-male interactions in driving the divergence of the acoustic traits and
contributes evidence for a role of intra-sexual selection in the evolution of the sound communication system of this anuran.
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This work was supported by a Fellowship for Doctoral thesis CONICYT AT24080118, a Fellowship for Doctoral thesis from the Guillermo Puelma
Foundation, postdoctoral FONDECYT grant 3120208, and FONDECYT grant 1080459
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/129453
DOI: DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0087732
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PLOS One January 2014 | Volume 9 | Issue 1 | e87732
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