Condition-dependent ways to manage acoustic signals under energetic constraint in a tree frog
Author(s) -
Loïc Brepson,
Yann Voituron,
Thierry Lengagne
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
behavioral ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.162
H-Index - 118
eISSN - 1465-7279
pISSN - 1045-2249
DOI - 10.1093/beheco/ars189
Subject(s) - biology , mating , sexual selection , constraint (computer aided design) , competition (biology) , tree frog , tree (set theory) , zoology , ecology , mathematics , combinatorics , geometry
International audienceBecause resources needed to produce sexual displays are limited, courting males are expected to face trade-offs between invest- ing in display properties selected by females and investing in the amount of display. This should be particularly the case in spe- cies with energetically expensive displays and high intrasexual competition through endurance rivalry like chorusing anurans. Studies that manipulated the energetic constraint in calling anurans have led to conflicting results, potentially due to nonsi- multaneous assessment of call properties selected by females and the calling activity (i.e., the total number of calls emitted by a male), and/or to the use of different strategies to face display trade-offs by males. We investigated display trade-offs in 36 males Hyla arborea (L.) by manipulating their energetic constraint through starvation/feeding experiments while recording their over- all call production during 10 consecutive nights. Even when considering simultaneously calling activity and call properties, the energetic constraint does not appear to impact call production. However, when focusing on individual responses, it appears that males cannot maintain both calling activity and within-bout call rate. Big and high-condition males mainly decrease this call property along the experiment, whereas small and low-condition males mainly decrease calling activity. Moreover, males who maintained calling activity the most are those who lost the most condition and, when refed, starved males only increased calling activity. These results suggest that calling activity is costlier to maintain than call properties but may confer a greater advantage in mating success, leading to different allocation strategies among males of different conditions. Key words: advertisement calls, body condition, call rate, chorus attendance, endurance rivalry, mate choice, sexual selection, signal honesty, trade-off, tree frog. [Behav Ecol
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