Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/14682
Título: Decoupled evolution between senders and receivers in the neotropical Allobates femoralis frog complex
Autor: Betancourth-Cundar, Mileidy
Lima, Albertina Pimental
Hödl, Walter
Amézquita, Adolfo
Palavras-chave: Advertising
Character State
Controlled Study
Human
Human Experiment
Male
Neotropics
Probability
Quantitative Study
Recognition
Species
Animals
Anura
Evolution
Female
Phylogeny
Physiology
Vocalization
Animalss
Anura
Biological Evolution
Female
Male
Phylogeny
Vocalization, Animals
Data do documento: 2016
Revista: PLoS ONE
É parte de: Volume 11, Número 6
Abstract: During acoustic communication, an audible message is transmitted from a sender to a receiver, often producing changes in behavior. In a system where evolutionary changes of the sender do not result in a concomitant adjustment in the receiver, communication and species recognition could fail. However, the possibility of an evolutionary decoupling between sender and receiver has rarely been studied. Frog populations in the Allobates femoralis cryptic species complex are known for their extensive morphological, genetic and acoustic variation. We hypothesized that geographic variation in acoustic signals of A. femoralis was correlated with geographic changes in communication through changes in male-male recognition. To test this hypothesis, we quantified male call recognition using phonotactic responses to playback experiments of advertisement calls with two, three and four notes in eight localities of the Amazonian basin. Then, we reconstructed the ancestral states of call note number in a phylogenetic framework and evaluated whether the character state of the most recent common ancestor predicted current relative responses to two, three and four notes. The probability of a phonotactic response to advertisement calls of A. femoralis males was strongly influenced by the call mid-frequency and the number of notes in most populations. Positive phonotaxis was complete for calls from each individual's population, and in some populations, it was also partial for allotopic calls; however, in two populations, individuals equally recognized calls with two, three or four notes. This evidence, in conjunction with our results from phylogenetic comparative methods, supports the hypothesis of decoupled evolution between sender and receiver in the male-male communication system of the A. femoralis complex. Thus, signal recognition appears to evolve more slowly than the calls. © 2016 Betancourth-Cundar et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0155929
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