CAS Key Laboratory of Mountain Ecological Restoration and Bioresource Utilization & Ecological Restoration and Biodiversity Conservation Key Laboratory of Sichuan Province, Chengdu Institute of Biology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Chengdu, China.
Ministry of Education Key Laboratory for Ecology of Tropical Islands, Key Laboratory of Tropical Animal and Plant Ecology of Hainan Province, College of Life Sciences, Hainan Normal University, Haikou, China.
Elife. 2022 May 6;11:e76083. doi: 10.7554/eLife.76083.
Many animals rely on complex signals that target multiple senses to attract mates and repel rivals. These multimodal displays can however also attract unintended receivers, which can be an important driver of signal complexity. Despite being taxonomically widespread, we often lack insight into how multimodal signals evolve from unimodal signals and in particular what roles unintended eavesdroppers play. Here, we assess whether the physical movements of parasite defense behavior increase the complexity and attractiveness of an acoustic sexual signal in the little torrent frog (). Calling males of this species often display limb movements in order to defend against blood-sucking parasites such as frog-biting midges that eavesdrop on their acoustic signal. Through mate choice tests we show that some of these midge-evoked movements influence female preference for acoustic signals. Our data suggest that midge-induced movements may be incorporated into a sexual display, targeting both hearing and vision in the intended receiver. Females may play an important role in incorporating these multiple components because they prefer signals which combine multiple modalities. Our results thus help to understand the relationship between natural and sexual selection pressure operating on signalers and how in turn this may influence multimodal signal evolution.
许多动物依赖于针对多种感觉的复杂信号来吸引配偶和击退竞争对手。然而,这些多模态显示也可能吸引意想不到的接收者,这可能是信号复杂性的一个重要驱动因素。尽管在分类上分布广泛,但我们通常缺乏关于多模态信号如何从单模态信号演变而来的洞察力,特别是关于意外偷听者扮演的角色。在这里,我们评估寄生虫防御行为的物理运动是否会增加小激流蛙()的声学性信号的复杂性和吸引力。该物种的雄性鸣叫者通常会进行肢体运动,以抵御吸血寄生虫,如吸食青蛙的蚊子,这些蚊子会偷听它们的声音信号。通过择偶测试,我们表明,这些蚊子引起的一些运动影响了雌性对声音信号的偏好。我们的数据表明,蚊子引起的运动可能被纳入性展示中,针对目标接收者的听觉和视觉。因为它们更喜欢结合多种模式的信号,所以雌性可能在纳入这些多种成分方面发挥重要作用。因此,我们的研究结果有助于理解作用于信号发送者的自然选择和性选择压力之间的关系,以及这反过来又如何影响多模态信号的进化。