Urbanization of animal habitats has the potential to affect the natural communication systems of any species able to survive in the changed environment. Urban animals such as squirrels use multiple signal channels to communicate, but it is unknown how urbanization has affected these behaviors. Multimodal communication, involving more than one sensory modality, can be studied by use of biomimetic mechanical animal models that are designed to simulate the multimodal signals and be presented to animal subjects in the field. In this way the responses to the various signal components can be compared and contrasted to determine whether the multimodal signal is made up of redundant or nonredundant components. In this study, we presented wild gray squirrels in relatively urban and relatively rural habitats in Western Massachusetts with a biomimetic squirrel model that produced tail flags and alarm barks in a variety of combinations. We found that the squirrels responded to each unimodal component on its own, the bark and tail flag, but they responded most to the complete multimodal signal, containing both the acoustic and the moving visual components, providing evidence that in this context the signal components are redundant and that their combination elicits multimodal enhancement. We expanded on the results of Partan et al. (2009) by providing data on signaling behavior in the presence and absence of conspecifics, suggesting that alarm signaling is more likely if conspecifics are present. We found that the squirrels were more active in the urban habitats and that they responded more to tail flagging in the urban habitats as compared to the rural ones, suggesting the interesting possibility of a multimodal shift from reliance on audio to visual signals in noisier more crowded urban habitats.
In species with complex courtship displays, male courtship performance is often used by females to assess male quality. The greater sac-winged bat ( Saccopteryx bilineata (Temminck, 1838)) lives in a harem-based resource-defence polygyny. Courting males perform complex hover displays in front of roosting females. Males differ in their social status by having females permanently or sporadically in their day-roost territory (harem males vs. nonharem males). We compared the frequency and duration of hover displays from harem and nonharem males in free-living colonies. Male social status was correlated with male age and the number of females being courted; thus, these two effects were removed to compare the frequency and duration of hover displays for harem and nonharem males. The frequency of hover displays per hour did not differ between harem and nonharem males, whereas the mean duration of hover displays was linked to male social status, with harem males exhibiting significantly longer hover displays than nonharem males. When analysing each social status separately, the hover display duration of both harem and nonharem males was neither influenced by the number of competing males nor by the number of females being courted. Male age did not influence the hover display duration of nonharem males; however, it had a significant effect on the hover display duration of harem males, with older harem males hovering significantly longer than younger harem males. Because females are free to choose in which male territory to roost, they might use the duration of hover displays to evaluate the quality of courting males.
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