Cortical Systems and Behavior Laboratory, Department of Psychology, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093, USA.
Am J Primatol. 2013 Sep;75(9):904-16. doi: 10.1002/ajp.22152. Epub 2013 Apr 16.
Noisy acoustic environments present several challenges for the evolution of acoustic communication systems. Among the most significant is the need to limit degradation of spectro-temporal signal structure in order to maintain communicative efficacy. This can be achieved by selecting for several potentially complementary processes. Selection can act on behavioral mechanisms permitting signalers to control the timing and occurrence of signal production to avoid acoustic interference. Likewise, the signal itself may be the target of selection, biasing the evolution of its structure to comprise acoustic features that avoid interference from ambient noise or degrade minimally in the habitat. Here, we address the latter topic for common marmoset (Callithrix jacchus) long-distance contact vocalizations, known as phee calls. Our aim was to test whether this vocalization is specifically adapted for transmission in a species-typical forest habitat, the Atlantic forests of northeastern Brazil. We combined seasonal analyses of ambient habitat acoustics with experiments in which pure tones, clicks, and vocalizations were broadcast and rerecorded at different distances to characterize signal degradation in the habitat. Ambient sound was analyzed from intervals throughout the day and over rainy and dry seasons, showing temporal regularities across varied timescales. Broadcast experiment results indicated that the tone and click stimuli showed the typically inverse relationship between frequency and signaling efficacy. Although marmoset phee calls degraded over distance with marked predictability compared with artificial sounds, they did not otherwise appear to be specially designed for increased transmission efficacy or minimal interference in this habitat. We discuss these data in the context of other similar studies and evidence of potential behavioral mechanisms for avoiding acoustic interference in order to maintain effective vocal communication in common marmosets.
嘈杂的声学环境对声学通讯系统的进化提出了几个挑战。其中最重要的是需要限制谱时信号结构的退化,以保持通讯的有效性。这可以通过选择几个潜在的互补过程来实现。选择可以作用于行为机制,使信号产生者能够控制信号产生的时间和发生,以避免声学干扰。同样,信号本身也可能成为选择的目标,偏向于信号结构的进化,包括避免环境噪声干扰或在栖息地最小程度退化的声学特征。在这里,我们针对常见的狨猴(Callithrix jacchus)长距离联络叫声,即 phee 叫声,探讨了后者的话题。我们的目的是测试这种叫声是否专门适应于在物种典型的森林栖息地——巴西东北部的大西洋森林中传播。我们将环境栖息地声学的季节性分析与纯音、点击和叫声的广播实验相结合,在不同距离下广播和重录这些声音,以表征栖息地中的信号退化。对全天和雨季和旱季的不同时间段进行了环境声音分析,显示出跨不同时间尺度的时间规律性。广播实验结果表明,与人工声音相比,声音和点击刺激表现出频率与信号效率之间的典型反比关系。尽管与人工声音相比,狨猴的 phee 叫声在距离上有明显的可预测性退化,但它们似乎并没有特别设计用于在这种栖息地中增加传输效率或最小化干扰。我们在其他类似研究的背景下讨论了这些数据,并讨论了为避免声学干扰而维持常见狨猴有效声音通讯的潜在行为机制的证据。