Chorus Organization in a Neotropical Forest Cicada

In many species of animals, males aggregate in particular locations and produce calls to attract searching females for reproduction. One striking feature of such choruses is synchronization. On a scale of hours, choruses are often concentrated at particular times of day, such as dawn or dusk. On a s...

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Main Author: Guy Beauchamp
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2024-11-01
Series:Biology
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Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2079-7737/13/11/913
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author Guy Beauchamp
author_facet Guy Beauchamp
author_sort Guy Beauchamp
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description In many species of animals, males aggregate in particular locations and produce calls to attract searching females for reproduction. One striking feature of such choruses is synchronization. On a scale of hours, choruses are often concentrated at particular times of day, such as dawn or dusk. On a scale of seconds, males may also synchronize the rhythm of their calls with one another. While synchronized calling at this scale suggests benefits acting at the collective level, competitive interactions between males to attract females can also lead to synchronized calling as an epiphenomenon. Why males in some species synchronize the rhythm of their calls is still debated, and more work is needed to understand the evolution of this behavior. I investigated chorus organization in the Emerald cicada (<i>Zammara smaragdula</i>), a Neotropical forest cicada in southern Belize, to explore these issues. Choruses in this species occurred at dawn and dusk and, occasionally, during daytime. There was no evidence for synchronization in the rhythm of calls among males, as bouts of collective calling occurred after quiet intervals of variable rather than fixed durations. The temporal aggregation of calls in this species thus probably emerged from competitive interactions among males to attract females. The degree of temporal overlap in the calls of males during a chorus varied as a function of chorus phase and time of day, suggesting flexibility in chorus organization, perhaps in relation to temporal variations in factors such as the number of calling cicadas, the number of predators present or ambient temperature during a chorus.
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spelling doaj-art-3d0e6416f7524e9b9c3f45b1f85313a12025-08-20T01:53:44ZengMDPI AGBiology2079-77372024-11-01131191310.3390/biology13110913Chorus Organization in a Neotropical Forest CicadaGuy Beauchamp0Independent Researcher, Montréal, QC, CanadaIn many species of animals, males aggregate in particular locations and produce calls to attract searching females for reproduction. One striking feature of such choruses is synchronization. On a scale of hours, choruses are often concentrated at particular times of day, such as dawn or dusk. On a scale of seconds, males may also synchronize the rhythm of their calls with one another. While synchronized calling at this scale suggests benefits acting at the collective level, competitive interactions between males to attract females can also lead to synchronized calling as an epiphenomenon. Why males in some species synchronize the rhythm of their calls is still debated, and more work is needed to understand the evolution of this behavior. I investigated chorus organization in the Emerald cicada (<i>Zammara smaragdula</i>), a Neotropical forest cicada in southern Belize, to explore these issues. Choruses in this species occurred at dawn and dusk and, occasionally, during daytime. There was no evidence for synchronization in the rhythm of calls among males, as bouts of collective calling occurred after quiet intervals of variable rather than fixed durations. The temporal aggregation of calls in this species thus probably emerged from competitive interactions among males to attract females. The degree of temporal overlap in the calls of males during a chorus varied as a function of chorus phase and time of day, suggesting flexibility in chorus organization, perhaps in relation to temporal variations in factors such as the number of calling cicadas, the number of predators present or ambient temperature during a chorus.https://www.mdpi.com/2079-7737/13/11/913acoustic communicationcoordinationinsectspredation risksynchronization
spellingShingle Guy Beauchamp
Chorus Organization in a Neotropical Forest Cicada
Biology
acoustic communication
coordination
insects
predation risk
synchronization
title Chorus Organization in a Neotropical Forest Cicada
title_full Chorus Organization in a Neotropical Forest Cicada
title_fullStr Chorus Organization in a Neotropical Forest Cicada
title_full_unstemmed Chorus Organization in a Neotropical Forest Cicada
title_short Chorus Organization in a Neotropical Forest Cicada
title_sort chorus organization in a neotropical forest cicada
topic acoustic communication
coordination
insects
predation risk
synchronization
url https://www.mdpi.com/2079-7737/13/11/913
work_keys_str_mv AT guybeauchamp chorusorganizationinaneotropicalforestcicada