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(Reference retrieved automatically from Web of Science through information on FAPESP grant and its corresponding number as mentioned in the publication by the authors.)

Evidence of auditory insensitivity to vocalization frequencies in two frogs

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Author(s):
Goutte, Sandra ; Mason, Matthew J. ; Christensen-Dalsgaard, Jakob ; Montealegre-Z, Fernando ; Chivers, Benedict D. ; Sarria-S, Fabio A. ; Antoniazzi, Marta M. ; Jared, Carlos ; Sato, Luciana Almeida ; Toledo, Luis Felipe
Total Authors: 10
Document type: Journal article
Source: SCIENTIFIC REPORTS; v. 7, SEP 21 2017.
Web of Science Citations: 6
Abstract

The emergence and maintenance of animal communication systems requires the co-evolution of signal and receiver. Frogs and toads rely heavily on acoustic communication for coordinating reproduction and typically have ears tuned to the dominant frequency of their vocalizations, allowing discrimination from background noise and heterospecific calls. However, we present here evidence that two anurans, Brachycephalus ephippium and B. pitanga, are insensitive to the sound of their own calls. Both species produce advertisement calls outside their hearing sensitivity range and their inner ears are partly undeveloped, which accounts for their lack of high-frequency sensitivity. If unheard by the intended receivers, calls are not beneficial to the emitter and should be selected against because of the costs associated with signal production. We suggest that protection against predators conferred by their high toxicity might help to explain why calling has not yet disappeared, and that visual communication may have replaced auditory in these colourful, diurnal frogs. (AU)

FAPESP's process: 14/23388-7 - Comunication and sensory systems of the anurans of the Atlantic Forest
Grantee:Luis Felipe de Toledo Ramos Pereira
Support Opportunities: Regular Research Grants