Ambient temperature and sound power of cicada calling songs (Hemiptera: Cicadidae: Tibicina) |
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Authors: | Jé rô me Sueur, Allen F. Sanborn&dagger |
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Affiliation: | École Pratique des Hautes Études, Biologie et Évolution des Insectes, Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris, France and;School of Natural and Health Sciences, Barry University, Miami Shores, FL, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | Abstract. Male cicadas produce a loud calling song that attracts females at long range. In some cases, ambient temperature has been shown to have an effect on the temporal structure of this acoustic signal. Here, a positive correlation is reported for the first time between the ambient temperature and the sound power of the calling song. This relationship is illustrated in three species of the Palaearctic genus Tibicina : Tibicina corsica fairmairei Boulard, Tibicina garricola Boulard and Tibicina tomentosa Olivier. It is suggested that the males thermoregulate behaviourally. The minimal ambient temperature range that the Tibicina species need to call is 22–24 °C. The effect of ambient temperature on calling song power is assumed to be the result of thermal effects in the response of the acoustic system (i.e. muscle activity of the acoustic system being temperature-dependent). Inter-individual and interspecific differences in calling song power are interpreted in the general context of the Tibicina sound behaviour. |
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Keywords: | Acoustic communication cicada France sound power sound pressure level thermoregulation. |
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