Differentiation of courtship songs in parapatric sibling species of dwarf stonebashers from southern Africa (Mormyridae, Teleostei)

Lamml, Michael and Kramer, Bernd (2006) Differentiation of courtship songs in parapatric sibling species of dwarf stonebashers from southern Africa (Mormyridae, Teleostei). BEHAVIOUR, 143. pp. 783-810. ISSN 0005-7959,

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Abstract

We describe the nocturnal courtship songs of male dwarf stonebashers, Pollimyrus castelnaui, from the Okavango River and its inland delta. We examined the question of whether the songs are sufficiently differentiated from those of its parapatric sibling species, the only recently discovered R marianne from the Upper Zambezi River, to form a potential cue for mate choice. Both species vocalised two sound types in courtship, the moan and the grunt, which they combined into long songs in similar fashion. However, one sound type was clearly differentiated: while P. castetnaui moans were of a husky quality and composed of three or four broadband formants, P. marianne moans were more tonal, with a single spectral line dominating the first and any higher formants (and a smaller bandwidth BW-10 dB for the dominant frequency of the first formant). Moan and Grunt Duration and the moan Pulse Group Period (mPGP) were longer, and the latter more variable, in P. castelnaui compared to P. marianne (range of mPGP: 10-30 ms in R castelnaui, 7-16.7 ms in P. marianne). P. castelnaui grunts were of longer duration and composed of more pulses than those of P. marianne. A single male from the contact zone between the Okavango and the Zambezi, the lower Kwando River, resembled P. castelnaui in moan BW-10 dB but P. marianne in Moan Duration and mPGP. Both southern African species thus vocalise in a species-specific fashion. Since in both species several characteristics of both moans and grunts show high between- and low within-male variability, mate choice may be selective for individual high-quality mates characterised by acoustic features.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: ELECTRIC FISH POLLIMYRUS; SOUND PRODUCTION; ACOUSTIC COMMUNICATION; INDIVIDUAL RECOGNITION; LAKE MALAWI; ISIDORI; DISCHARGES; BEHAVIOR; PISCES; FORM; acoustic communication; electric fish; reproduction; species recognition; variability; vocalisation
Subjects: 500 Science > 590 Zoological sciences
Divisions: Biology, Preclinical Medicine > Institut für Zoologie
Depositing User: Dr. Gernot Deinzer
Date Deposited: 15 Feb 2021 06:10
Last Modified: 15 Feb 2021 06:10
URI: https://pred.uni-regensburg.de/id/eprint/34463

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