Fang Guangzhan, Jiang Fan, Yang Ping, Cui Jianguo, Brauth Steven E, Tang Yezhong
Chengdu Institute of Biology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, No.9 Section 4, Renmin Nan Road, Chengdu, 610041, Sichuan, People's Republic of China,
Anim Cogn. 2014 Mar;17(2):483-94. doi: 10.1007/s10071-013-0680-5. Epub 2013 Sep 13.
Male-male vocal competition in anuran species is critical for mating success; however, it is also highly time-consuming, energetically demanding and likely to increase predation risks. Thus, we hypothesized that changes in the social context would cause male vocal competition to change in real time in order to minimize the costs and maximize the benefits of competition. To test this hypothesis, we assessed the effect of repeating playbacks of either white noise (WN) or male advertisement calls on male call production in the Emei music frog (Babina daunchina), a species in which males build mud-retuse burrows and call from within these nests. Previous studies have shown that calls produced from inside burrows are highly sexually attractive (HSA) to females while those produced outside nests are of low sexual attractiveness (LSA). Results showed that most subjects called responsively after the end of WN playbacks but before the onset of conspecific call stimuli although call numbers were similar, indicating that while males adjusted competitive patterns according to the biological significance of signals, their competitive motivation did not change. Furthermore, these data indicate that the frogs had evolved the ability of interval timing. Moreover, when the inter-stimulus interval (ISI) between playbacks was varied, the subjects preferentially competed with HSA calls when the ISI was short (<4 s) but responded equally to HSA and LSA calls if the ISI was long (≥4 s), suggesting that males allocate competitive efforts depending on both the perceived sexual attractiveness of rivals and the time available for calling. Notably, approximately two-thirds of male calls occurred in response to HSA calls, a preference rate comparable to that previously found for females in phonotaxis experiments and consistent with the idea that the mechanisms underlying both the male's competitive responses to rivals and the female's preferences toward potential mates coevolved under the same selective pressure.
在无尾两栖类物种中,雄性之间的发声竞争对于交配成功至关重要;然而,这种竞争也非常耗时、精力消耗大,并且可能增加被捕食的风险。因此,我们推测社会环境的变化会导致雄性发声竞争实时改变,以便将竞争成本降至最低并使竞争收益最大化。为了验证这一假设,我们评估了重复播放白噪声(WN)或雄性广告叫声对峨眉仙琴蛙(弹琴蛙)雄性鸣叫产生的影响,在该物种中,雄性会建造泥质隐居洞穴并在这些巢穴内鸣叫。先前的研究表明,在洞穴内发出的叫声对雌性具有高度性吸引力(HSA),而在巢穴外发出的叫声性吸引力较低(LSA)。结果表明,大多数实验对象在白噪声播放结束后但在同种叫声刺激开始前会做出响应鸣叫,尽管鸣叫次数相似,这表明雄性虽然根据信号的生物学意义调整了竞争模式,但其竞争动机并未改变。此外,这些数据表明青蛙已经进化出了间隔计时的能力。而且,当播放之间的刺激间隔(ISI)发生变化时,当ISI较短(<4秒)时,实验对象优先与HSA叫声竞争,但如果ISI较长(≥4秒),则对HSA和LSA叫声的反应相同,这表明雄性根据对手的感知性吸引力和鸣叫可用时间来分配竞争努力。值得注意的是,大约三分之二的雄性叫声是对HSA叫声的响应,这一偏好率与先前在雌性趋声实验中发现的相当,并且与雄性对对手的竞争反应和雌性对潜在配偶的偏好背后的机制在相同的选择压力下共同进化的观点一致。