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Calling Bout (calling + bout)
Selected AbstractsTemporal and Geographic Variation in the Advertisement Call of the Booroolong Frog (Litoria booroolongensis: Anura: Hylidae)ETHOLOGY, Issue 12 2005Michael J. Smith The mechanisms that underlie sexual selection rely upon within- and among-individual variability in the targeted traits. In this study, we examined variation in the advertisement call of the booroolong frog (Litoria booroolongensis) at several different levels: between populations, between breeding seasons in the same population, among males within a population, within males between nights and within males in a single calling bout. The call of L. booroolongensis has multiple notes with a pulsed structure. We detected considerable variation in advertisement call structure between breeding seasons and between populations. The measured call properties ranged from static to dynamic; however, most properties were intermediate between the criteria that have been traditionally used to define call traits as static or dynamic (,5 and ,12% respectively). We compared actual and relative repeatabilities and found that the temporal call properties associated with the structure of the note had the highest values, suggesting that these characters in particular may respond to selection. We argue that relative repeatabilities are a particularly useful measure of the potential for evolutionary response to selection as they account for an individual's relative performance during the period of assessment in an ever-changing breeding arena. [source] Call Structure Variability and Field Survival among Bushcrickets Exposed to Phonotactic ParasitoidsETHOLOGY, Issue 5 2000Geoff R. Allen Calling adult males of the univoltine bushcricket Sciarasaga quadrata are subject to significant mortality from the phonotactic parasitoid fly Homotrixa alleni. These flies kill their host within 14d and act as a constant ,filter' on the survival of male bushcrickets. In this study, I investigate both short-term and lifetime variability in male call structure and compare the call properties of collections of males made over a 3-mo calling season to establish whether there are any significant differences in the call properties of males surviving the length of the calling season. Call frequency, chirp length, interchirp length, chirp rate, file teeth used to make a chirp and duty cycle all showed good differentiation among males and significant repeatability: (1) within a calling bout (0.57,0.88), (2) between successive nights (0.27,0.83), and (3) over a male's lifetime (0.15,0.43). Frequency and to a lesser extent chirp length showed low variability within and among males whereas interchirp length was the most flexible and dynamic call property. As males aged, chirp length, which is produced by one wing closure, and its correlate, teeth per chirp, significantly increased and chirp rate significantly decreased. Over the calling season chirp length and teeth per chirp showed strong directional shifts. Shorter chirp males were lost from the calling population, indicating that flies may use chirp length as a cue in host location. The implications of this result are discussed in relation to the reproductive fitness of male S. quadrata and within the context of host location and sensory bias in phontotactic parasitoids. [source] Comparisons of calling behaviour of different geographical populations of Helicoverpa armigeraJOURNAL OF APPLIED ENTOMOLOGY, Issue 9-10 2007X.-C. Zhao Abstract:, The cotton bollworm, Helicoverpa armigera, with worldwide distribution, evolves into different geotypes for adapting to the changes of geographical climates. Comparisons of calling behaviour of the insect collected from the temperate region in northern China (Beijing), the temperate region in north-western China (Kashi) and the tropical region in southern China (Haikou) were investigated in the laboratory as a first step to understanding the influence of reproductive behaviour on its population differentiation. There were more than 80% of virgin females of each population that showed calling behaviour. The age at which the moths of all three populations initiated calling varied significantly. The durations of calling in scotophase and the percentages of females calling also differed between populations. Only a few females of the Beijing and Haikou populations called in the first 2 h after the onset of scotophase, whereas many Kashi females called at this time. However, the main calling peak occurred during the second half of scotophase for all three populations. Females of the Beijing and Haikou populations exhibited similar calling onset times at the same age, whereas the Kashi females initiated calling significantly earlier than those of Beijing and Haikou from nights 3 to 7. The durations of each calling bout and the time spent by both Beijing and Haikou populations were similar to each other at the same age, but were significantly shorter than that of the Kashi population from nights 3 to 7. These results suggest that there are genetic variations not only in pre-period calling but also in the calling behaviour of H. armigera. [source] Calling behaviour of adult female Helicoverpa armigera (Hübner) (Lep., Noctuidae) of overwintering generation and effects of matingJOURNAL OF APPLIED ENTOMOLOGY, Issue 2 2000M. L. Hou The calling behaviour of overwintering generation females of Helicoverpa armigera and the effects of mating were studied in the laboratory at 24 ± 1°C and under reversed light-dark cycle (16 h light : 8 h dark). Age had a significant influence on calling patterns. Based on calling age, mean number of calling bouts and total calling length of virgin females increased significantly, and mean onset time of calling advanced significantly from calling day 1 to subsequent calling days. Females of the overwintering generation exhibited more short bouts in calling, and some females that initiated calling on a previous day did not call on subsequent days. Mating had no effect on the overall patterns, but did affect calling behaviour. Mated females did not resume calling after mating during the same scotophase and, on the day following mating, mated females called less frequently and for a shorter duration, but thereafter increased to the same level of virgin females of the same calling age. Furthermore, as the moth aged, the percentage of mated females calling was lower than that of virgin females. [source] |