Abstract

Studies have shown that long-range songs of birds and primates are structurally adapted to local habitat acoustics. The evolution of frog calls, however, seems to be less influenced by habitat. Frogs are extremely dependent on energetically costly acoustic signals, which frequently have to be transmitted over large distances to elicit an encounter with the opposite sex. Different acoustic properties of advertisement calls from 95 Bolivian anuran species were analyzed according to their taxonomic position and the habitat characteristics where each species occurred. The majority of call characteristics, such as diversity of notes, number of pulses per note, or dominant frequency, appear strongly related to taxonomic position. Large-scale habitat characteristics (ecoregion and macrohabitat type) were not related to call characteristics, whereas small-scale habitat (microhabitat) complexity appeared to explain some of the variation in dominant frequency modulation. Species that call in closed microhabitats are more likely to use frequency-modulated calls, which may allow for more efficient sound transmission. To further the understanding of frog-call evolution in response to habitat selection, this and other studies have indicated that studies at finer spatial scales are needed, as well as additional studies restricted to the genus or species level.

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