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Diphasy in the advertisement calls of Geocrinia laevis (Anura: Leptodactylidae): vocal responses of males during field playback experiments

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Summary

The advertisement calls of Geocrinia laevis are diphasic, and consist of a single introductory note, followed by a series of repeated notes; diphasy is based on differentiation in the temporal structure of the two phases. In a series of field playback tests used to investigate the functional significance of diphasy, calling males were presented with one of three types of acoustic stimulus: complete calls (introductory and repeated notes), introductory notes only, or repeated notes only. There were no marked differences in the effects of these stimuli, and all resulted in a reduction in the rates of production of introductory notes and of repeated notes. Playback at levels of 110 dB PSPL and above caused virtual cessation of calling. The results suggest that one of the functions of the advertisement call, the communication of territoriality between males, does not reside in either the introductory note or the repeated notes, so that diphasy in the advertisement call has no apparent functional basis in this context. Whether the attraction of reproductively ripe females is a particular function of either phase remains untested. The advertisement calls of G. laevis are much less diphasic than those of a closely related species, G. victoriana, for which there is a clear partitioning of the functions of communication of territoriality and the attraction of conspecific mates between the introductory notes and the repeated notes, respectively. Furthermore, the acoustic repertoire of G. laevis is less complex than that of G. victoriana in lacking a vocalisation which functions specifically in close-range aggressive encounters between males.

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Harrison, P.A., Littlejohn, M.J. Diphasy in the advertisement calls of Geocrinia laevis (Anura: Leptodactylidae): vocal responses of males during field playback experiments. Behav Ecol Sociobiol 18, 67–73 (1985). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00299239

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00299239

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