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You have accessMoreSectionsView PDF ToolsAdd to favoritesDownload CitationsTrack Citations ShareShare onFacebookTwitterLinked InRedditEmail Cite this article Bailey Nathan W and Zuk Marlene 2009Acoustic experience shapes female mate choice in field cricketsProc. R. Soc. B.276787–788http://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2008.1697SectionYou have accessCorrectionsAcoustic experience shapes female mate choice in field crickets Nathan W Bailey Nathan W Bailey Google Scholar Find this author on PubMed Search for more papers by this author and Marlene Zuk Marlene Zuk Google Scholar Find this author on PubMed Search for more papers by this author Nathan W Bailey Nathan W Bailey Google Scholar Find this author on PubMed Search for more papers by this author and Marlene Zuk Marlene Zuk Google Scholar Find this author on PubMed Search for more papers by this author Published:07 November 2008https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2008.1697This article corrects the followingResearch ArticleAcoustic experience shapes female mate choice in field cricketshttps://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2008.0859 Nathan W Bailey and Marlene Zuk volume 275issue 1651Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences12 August 2008In Bailey & Zuk (2008), we inaccurately cited a previous publication (Bailey 2008) as evidence that the Teleogryllus oceanicus females mostly preferred the 60% long-chirp male song model in mate choice playback tests. The previous publication does not explicitly indicate the most preferred song model. However, this does not affect the results or the interpretation in Bailey & Zuk (2008). The key point is that the female crickets reared in the ‘song’ environment mostly preferred the 60% long-chirp male song model, which is evident from figure 1. The rationale and conclusion that the discrimination was increased among ‘song’ crickets therefore remains the same: females that experienced song during rearing responded rapidly only to their most preferred song model, whereas the females reared in silence responded rapidly to all song models. We have also resupplied a corrected version of figure 1. Two bars (the 40 and 60% ‘no song’ bars) were accidentally transposed when the original graph was created, but neither the data, the statistical results nor our interpretation are affected.Figure 1 Likelihood that females positively responded to calling song playbacks. Females exposed to song (Song) during rearing are represented by grey bars, and those reared in silence (No Song) by black bars. Each female was tested with one of six song models varying in the proportion of long chirp (0–100% long chirp); a positive response was scored if the female moved to the end of the testing arena and touched the playback speaker before the end of the 5 min trial.Download figureOpen in new tabDownload PowerPointFootnotes© 2008 The Royal SocietyReferencesReferenceBailey N.W. 2008Love will tear you apart: different components of female choice exert contrasting selection on males. Behav. Ecol. 19, 960–966.doi:10.1093/beheco/arn054. . Crossref, ISI, Google Scholar Previous Article VIEW FULL TEXT DOWNLOAD PDF FiguresRelatedReferencesDetailsRelated articlesAcoustic experience shapes female mate choice in field crickets12 August 2008Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences This Issue22 February 2009Volume 276Issue 1657 Article InformationDOI:https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2008.1697Published by:Royal SocietyPrint ISSN:0962-8452Online ISSN:1471-2954History: Published online07/11/2008Published in print22/02/2009 License:© 2008 The Royal Society Citations and impact Subjectsbehaviour Large datasets are available through Proceedings B's partnership with Dryad

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