Anthropogenic substrate-borne vibrations impact anuran calling

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Caorsi, Valentina Zaffaroni
Data de Publicação: 2019
Outros Autores: Batista, Vinicius Guerra, Furtado, Raíssa, Llusia, Diego, Miron, Lívia Roese, Martins, Márcio Borges, Both, Camila Chiamenti, Narins, Peter M., Meenderink, Sebastiaan W. F., Márquez, Rafael
Tipo de documento: Artigo
Idioma: eng
Título da fonte: Repositório Institucional da UFRGS
Texto Completo: http://hdl.handle.net/10183/224260
Resumo: Anthropogenic disturbance is a major cause of the biodiversity crisis. Nevertheless, the role of anthropogenic substrate vibrations in disrupting animal behavior is poorly understood. Amphibians comprise the terrestrial vertebrates most sensitive to vibrations, and since communication is crucial to their survival and reproduction, they are a suitable model for investigating this timely subject. Playback tests were used to assess the effects of substrate vibrations produced by two sources of anthropogenic activity– road traffic and wind turbines– on the calling activity of a naïve population of terrestrial toads. In their natural habitat, a buried tactile sound transducer was used to emit simulated traffic and wind turbine vibrations, and changes in the toads’ acoustic responses were analyzed by measuring parameters important for reproductive success: call rate, call duration and dominant frequency. Our results showed a significant call rate reduction by males of Alytes obstetricans in response to both seismic sources, whereas other parameters remained stable. Since females of several species prefer males with higher call rates, our results suggest that anthropogenically derived substrate-borne vibrations could reduce individual reproductive success. Our study demonstrates a clear negative effect of anthropogenic vibrations on anuran communication, and the urgent need for further investigation in this area.
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spelling Caorsi, Valentina ZaffaroniBatista, Vinicius GuerraFurtado, RaíssaLlusia, DiegoMiron, Lívia RoeseMartins, Márcio BorgesBoth, Camila ChiamentiNarins, Peter M.Meenderink, Sebastiaan W. F.Márquez, Rafael2021-07-21T04:24:01Z20192045-2322http://hdl.handle.net/10183/224260001112616Anthropogenic disturbance is a major cause of the biodiversity crisis. Nevertheless, the role of anthropogenic substrate vibrations in disrupting animal behavior is poorly understood. Amphibians comprise the terrestrial vertebrates most sensitive to vibrations, and since communication is crucial to their survival and reproduction, they are a suitable model for investigating this timely subject. Playback tests were used to assess the effects of substrate vibrations produced by two sources of anthropogenic activity– road traffic and wind turbines– on the calling activity of a naïve population of terrestrial toads. In their natural habitat, a buried tactile sound transducer was used to emit simulated traffic and wind turbine vibrations, and changes in the toads’ acoustic responses were analyzed by measuring parameters important for reproductive success: call rate, call duration and dominant frequency. Our results showed a significant call rate reduction by males of Alytes obstetricans in response to both seismic sources, whereas other parameters remained stable. Since females of several species prefer males with higher call rates, our results suggest that anthropogenically derived substrate-borne vibrations could reduce individual reproductive success. Our study demonstrates a clear negative effect of anthropogenic vibrations on anuran communication, and the urgent need for further investigation in this area.application/pdfengScientific reports [recurso eletrônico]. London. Vol. 9 (2019), Art. 19456, 10 p.AnurosPerturbações antropogênicasSubstratoComportamento animalAnthropogenic substrate-borne vibrations impact anuran callingEstrangeiroinfo:eu-repo/semantics/articleinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessreponame:Repositório Institucional da UFRGSinstname:Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS)instacron:UFRGSTEXT001112616.pdf.txt001112616.pdf.txtExtracted Texttext/plain53816http://www.lume.ufrgs.br/bitstream/10183/224260/2/001112616.pdf.txt3e713749ce8c7163a438aa0b9054f534MD52ORIGINAL001112616.pdfTexto completo (inglês)application/pdf1555496http://www.lume.ufrgs.br/bitstream/10183/224260/1/001112616.pdfb2b84e67834bdf84af8e7ac4cb117e5cMD5110183/2242602021-08-18 04:51:22.838484oai:www.lume.ufrgs.br:10183/224260Repositório de PublicaçõesPUBhttps://lume.ufrgs.br/oai/requestopendoar:2021-08-18T07:51:22Repositório Institucional da UFRGS - Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS)false
dc.title.pt_BR.fl_str_mv Anthropogenic substrate-borne vibrations impact anuran calling
title Anthropogenic substrate-borne vibrations impact anuran calling
spellingShingle Anthropogenic substrate-borne vibrations impact anuran calling
Caorsi, Valentina Zaffaroni
Anuros
Perturbações antropogênicas
Substrato
Comportamento animal
title_short Anthropogenic substrate-borne vibrations impact anuran calling
title_full Anthropogenic substrate-borne vibrations impact anuran calling
title_fullStr Anthropogenic substrate-borne vibrations impact anuran calling
title_full_unstemmed Anthropogenic substrate-borne vibrations impact anuran calling
title_sort Anthropogenic substrate-borne vibrations impact anuran calling
author Caorsi, Valentina Zaffaroni
author_facet Caorsi, Valentina Zaffaroni
Batista, Vinicius Guerra
Furtado, Raíssa
Llusia, Diego
Miron, Lívia Roese
Martins, Márcio Borges
Both, Camila Chiamenti
Narins, Peter M.
Meenderink, Sebastiaan W. F.
Márquez, Rafael
author_role author
author2 Batista, Vinicius Guerra
Furtado, Raíssa
Llusia, Diego
Miron, Lívia Roese
Martins, Márcio Borges
Both, Camila Chiamenti
Narins, Peter M.
Meenderink, Sebastiaan W. F.
Márquez, Rafael
author2_role author
author
author
author
author
author
author
author
author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Caorsi, Valentina Zaffaroni
Batista, Vinicius Guerra
Furtado, Raíssa
Llusia, Diego
Miron, Lívia Roese
Martins, Márcio Borges
Both, Camila Chiamenti
Narins, Peter M.
Meenderink, Sebastiaan W. F.
Márquez, Rafael
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Anuros
Perturbações antropogênicas
Substrato
Comportamento animal
topic Anuros
Perturbações antropogênicas
Substrato
Comportamento animal
description Anthropogenic disturbance is a major cause of the biodiversity crisis. Nevertheless, the role of anthropogenic substrate vibrations in disrupting animal behavior is poorly understood. Amphibians comprise the terrestrial vertebrates most sensitive to vibrations, and since communication is crucial to their survival and reproduction, they are a suitable model for investigating this timely subject. Playback tests were used to assess the effects of substrate vibrations produced by two sources of anthropogenic activity– road traffic and wind turbines– on the calling activity of a naïve population of terrestrial toads. In their natural habitat, a buried tactile sound transducer was used to emit simulated traffic and wind turbine vibrations, and changes in the toads’ acoustic responses were analyzed by measuring parameters important for reproductive success: call rate, call duration and dominant frequency. Our results showed a significant call rate reduction by males of Alytes obstetricans in response to both seismic sources, whereas other parameters remained stable. Since females of several species prefer males with higher call rates, our results suggest that anthropogenically derived substrate-borne vibrations could reduce individual reproductive success. Our study demonstrates a clear negative effect of anthropogenic vibrations on anuran communication, and the urgent need for further investigation in this area.
publishDate 2019
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dc.relation.ispartof.pt_BR.fl_str_mv Scientific reports [recurso eletrônico]. London. Vol. 9 (2019), Art. 19456, 10 p.
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