Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Precedence effects and the evolution of chorusing

1997; Royal Society; Volume: 264; Issue: 1386 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1098/rspb.1997.0188

ISSN

1471-2954

Autores

Michael D. Greenfield, Michael K. Tourtellot, Wayne A. Snedden,

Tópico(s)

Insect and Arachnid Ecology and Behavior

Resumo

The structured choruses produced by rhythmically signalling males in many species of acoustic animals have long–captured the imagination of evolutionary biologists. Though various hypotheses have been forwarded to explain the adaptive significance of such chorusing, none have withstood empirical scrutiny. We suggest instead that alternating and synchronous choruses represent collective epiphenomena resulting from individual males competing to jam each other's signals. These competitions originate in psychoacoustic precedence effects wherein females only orient toward the first call of a sequence, thus selectively favouring males who produce leading calls. Given this perceptual bias, our modelling confirms that a resetting of signal rhythm by neighbours' signals, which generates either alternation or synchrony, is evolutionarily stable provided that resetting includes a relativity adjustment for the velocity of signal transmission and selective attention toward only a subset of signalling neighbours. Signalling strategies in chorusing insects and anurans are consistent with these predicted features.

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