Animal Signaling and Function 2014
DOI: 10.1002/9781118966624.ch7
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Acoustic Signal Evolution: Biomechanics, Size, and Performance

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Cited by 11 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…The proposed positive selection on wing size may correspond to the functional consequences of larger size for the acoustic parameters in a male's song. Larger sound‐generating organs are generally associated with the production of lower‐frequency signals (Bennet‐Clark, ; Podos & Patek, ), a common pattern also found comparing species of bushcrickets (Del Castillo & Gwynne, ). This pattern needs still to be verified in our species, as a study in crickets detected increasing sound apparatus sizes with larger male body size, but was unable to detect an association with song frequencies (Miyashita et al ., ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 82%
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“…The proposed positive selection on wing size may correspond to the functional consequences of larger size for the acoustic parameters in a male's song. Larger sound‐generating organs are generally associated with the production of lower‐frequency signals (Bennet‐Clark, ; Podos & Patek, ), a common pattern also found comparing species of bushcrickets (Del Castillo & Gwynne, ). This pattern needs still to be verified in our species, as a study in crickets detected increasing sound apparatus sizes with larger male body size, but was unable to detect an association with song frequencies (Miyashita et al ., ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 82%
“…Female choice of heavier males is adaptive, as females energetically benefit from consumption of the nutritious spermatophylax (Voigt et al ., , ; Lehmann & Lehmann, ). The development of larger wings, a longer stridulatory file and larger stridulatory teeth, however, might be constrained by several factors like the costs of sexually selected features (Simmons et al ., ; Podos & Patek, ), genetic covariance with other traits and the resources available during ontogenesis (Bonduriansky, ). Bushcricket males face high costs in producing the nuptial gift, which in P. ampliatus represents 20% of a male's body mass (Lehmann and Lehmann, unpublished data).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The functional significance of signal variability has been well documented; different signals can convey a variety of messages, or enhance the efficacy of transmission in different environments (Balakrishan, 2016;Gerhardt and Huber, 2002;Greenfield, 2002). Comparatively little is understood about the underlying neural and mechanical controlthe proximate mechanismsrequired to produce different signal types (Podos and Patek, 2014). Yet, such mechanisms are the basis upon which selection acts and are therefore important for understanding the evolution of communication (Podos and Patek, 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%