Spoiled for choice: Number of signalers constrains mate choice based on acoustic signals
收藏DataCite Commons2025-05-01 更新2025-05-10 收录
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https://datadryad.org/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.k98sf7m6t
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资源简介:
In many taxa, receivers use signals to detect and discriminate among
mates. Signal detection and discrimination thus has important fitness
consequences for individuals. Noise is defined as any factor that prevents
detection or discrimination of signals. The noise produced by groups of
signaling animals is a well-known impediment to signal detection and
discrimination in animals, but how many signals produce the emergent,
masking effects of noise? This dataset was generated to explore how
receivers discriminate among signals in noisy, multi-choice environments.
Subjects were female Australian field crickets, Teleogryllus
oceanicus. We performed a series of phonotaxis (movement toward
sound) assays in which we manipulated the number of long chirps in the
signal. First, we assessed female preferences for the number of long chirp
pulses and found that receivers preferred more long chirp pulses to fewer.
Then we gave receivers a choice between a preferred, 7-pulse
signal and either 1, 3, 5, or 7 presentations of the
non-preferred, 2-pulse signal ("the multi-choice experiment").
We observed the probability that subjects left the release point,
the probability that subjects responded to playback, and the probability
of choosing the preferred stimulus. We also recorded the subject's
latency to leave the release point and the latency to respond to playback.
Because the angular separation between speakers decreased with increasing
number of playback speakers in the multi-choice experiment, we then
conducted an experiment ("the angular separation experiment") to
determine whether observed effects were due to the spatial configuration
of speakers or due to the emergent noise of multiple playback
speakers.
提供机构:
Dryad
创建时间:
2021-10-29



