Acoustic signalling performance: variation in vigour at multiple scales
Sexual displays can be energetically taxing, power-limited tests of endurance that favour the vigorous. Therefore, these displays may reliably indicate the ability to pay the energetic costs of sustained motor performance. Field cricket calling song involves the repeated mechanical movement of wings...
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Published in | Animal behaviour Vol. 184; pp. 157 - 171 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Elsevier Ltd
01.02.2022
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Sexual displays can be energetically taxing, power-limited tests of endurance that favour the vigorous. Therefore, these displays may reliably indicate the ability to pay the energetic costs of sustained motor performance. Field cricket calling song involves the repeated mechanical movement of wings to produce pulses of sound grouped into species-specific chirp patterns, often sustained for long periods across nights. We quantified variation and repeatability of cricket calling song phenotypes and determined how age and body size impacted this variation. All our experiments involved tightly controlled signalling environments, but there was a great deal of interindividual variation in behaviour. Although there were species differences, most traits associated with signalling vigour exhibited mean level declines with age and conditional repeatability (individual∗age interactions). These results suggest that males differing in quality may differ in their ability to buffer themselves against age-related changes in signalling vigour. Furthermore, the repeatability of calling traits itself changed with age, declining slightly in some species but increasing in others. We also challenged motor performance by altering dietary carbohydrate and protein; we predicted that increased carbohydrate would enhance signalling vigour and increased protein would decrease it. Although diet influenced the probability of calling and time spent calling in a predictable manner, these effects were not profound. Our findings confirm the scope for sexual selection to act on motor performance and point to ways in which constraints and trade-offs may yield variation within and among species in how vigour is signalled.
•Calling in crickets involves repeated mechanical wing movements (performance).•Individuals differed in calling vigour and in changes in vigour with age.•Although diet predictably influenced calling vigour, the effects were small.•Trade-offs may yield variation between vigour and other fitness-enhancing traits. |
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ISSN: | 0003-3472 1095-8282 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.anbehav.2021.08.001 |