Search results for "Animal communication"

showing 10 items of 49 documents

Crocodile egg sounds signal hatching time.

2008

Summary Crocodilians are known to vocalize within the egg shortly before hatching [1,2]. Although a possible function of these calls — inducing hatching in siblings and stimulating the adult female to open the nest — has already been suggested, it has never been experimentally tested [1–5]. Here, we present the first experimental evidence that pre-hatching calls of Nile crocodile ( Crocodylus niloticus ) juveniles are informative acoustic signals which indeed target both siblings and mother.

0106 biological sciencesNile crocodileZoologyCrocodile010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology03 medical and health sciencesNestbiology.animalAnimalsMaternal BehaviorComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS030304 developmental biologyOvum0303 health sciencesAlligators and CrocodilesbiologyAdult femaleAgricultural and Biological Sciences(all)Behavior AnimalHatchingEcologyBiochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology(all)[SCCO.NEUR]Cognitive science/Neuroscience[SCCO.NEUR] Cognitive science/NeuroscienceAcousticsbiology.organism_classificationCrocodylusAnimal Communication[ SCCO.NEUR ] Cognitive science/NeuroscienceFemaleVocalization AnimalGeneral Agricultural and Biological Sciences
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Acoustic communication in the Kittiwake Rissa tridactyla: potential cues for sexual and individual signatures in long calls

2007

International audience; Sex and individual recognition systems vary among species and can have various functions in different contexts. In order to determine the basis of identification by voice in the Kittiwake (Rissa tridactyla), the greeting calls of 32 individuals (18 males and 14 females) were recorded in May–June 2004 on the Kittiwake colony of Hornøya island (Barents sea) and analysed. On the basis of coefficient of variation calculations and discriminant analyses, we show (1) that calls are sexually dimorphic and that the dimorphism is mainly based on the value of the fundamental frequency, and (2) that calls are individually distinct, individuality being due to a complex of tempora…

0106 biological sciences[SDV.OT]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Other [q-bio.OT]Rissa tridactylabiology[SDV.OT] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Other [q-bio.OT]Ecology[SDV.NEU.NB]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC]/Neurobiology[SCCO.NEUR]Cognitive science/Neuroscience05 social sciencesContext (language use)biology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesSexual dimorphismHabitatMating callKittiwake0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesAnimal communicationIdentification (biology)050102 behavioral science & comparative psychology[ SDV.OT ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Other [q-bio.OT]General Agricultural and Biological SciencesComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSPolar Biology
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Age Differences in the Response of Willow Tits (Parus montanus ) to Conspecific Alarm Calls

2003

Predation is an important mortality factor in wintering birds. To counter this, birds produce alarm calls in the presence of predators which serve to warn conspecifics. In social hierarchical bird flocks, adults survive the winter better than juveniles and therefore survival strategies probably vary with social status. This study examined the differential responses to alarm calls by free-living willow tits, Parus montanus, in dominance-structured winter flocks in Finland. To explore the age-dependent differences in response to conspecific alarm calls, a series with three alarm calls was played to focal adults and juveniles while they sat in the middle section of a spruce branch. Immediately…

ALARMEcologyJuvenileZoologyAnimal Science and ZoologyMammalAnimal communicationFlockBiologyAlarm signalEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSocial relationPredationEthology
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The effect of scents on the territorial and aggressive behaviour of laboratory rats

1992

The majority of works found in the literature mention odours as an important factor in the development of social lines and the unleashing of aggressive behaviour, but very few authors have studied more deeply the role that these odours play, how they influence behaviour and what importance the variations of these marks of identity may have. In the present work we analyse social relations presented by laboratory rats (Rattus norvegicus, Wistar breed) in seminatural conditions, with special reference to behaviours of dominance, territorialism and aggressiveness, and the importance that these marks of odour play on these behaviours. For this purpose, different individuals (from the established…

AggressionGeneral MedicineSocial behaviourOlfactionChemical communicationSocial relationDevelopmental psychologyBehavioral NeuroscienceDominance (ethology)medicineAnimal Science and ZoologyAnimal communicationmedicine.symptomPsychologyBehavioural Processes
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The meaning of biological signals.

2020

We introduce the virtual special issue on content in signalling systems. The issue explores the uses and limits of ideas from evolutionary game theory and information theory for explaining the content of biological signals. We explain the basic idea of the Lewis-Skyrms sender-receiver framework, and we highlight three key themes of the issue: (i) the challenge of accounting for deception, misinformation and false content, (ii) the relevance of partial or total common interest to the evolution of meaningful signals, and (iii) how the sender-receiver framework relates to teleosemantics.

Cognitive scienceHistoryDeceptionComputer sciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectCommunicationEvolutionary game theoryQ Science (General)B Philosophy (General)General MedicineDeceptionInformation theoryBiological EvolutionModels BiologicalAnimal CommunicationMeaning (philosophy of language)History and Philosophy of ScienceGame TheoryKey (cryptography)AnimalsHumansRelevance (information retrieval)MisinformationGame theorymedia_commonStudies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences
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Putting information back into biological communication.

2010

At the heart of many debates on communication is the concept of information. There is an intuitive sense in which communication implies the transfer of some kind of information, probably the reason why information is an essential ingredient in most definitions of communication. However, information has also been an endless source of misunderstandings, and recent accounts have proposed that information should be dropped from a formal definition of communication. In this article, we re-evaluate the merits and the internal logic of information-based vs. information-free approaches and conclude that information-free approaches are conceptually incomplete and operationally hindered. Instead, we …

Cognitive scienceScope (project management)Redundancy (linguistics)BiologyBiological EvolutionReferential communicationAnimal CommunicationInformative contentTerminology as TopicAnimalsEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsInternal logicFormal descriptionDiversity (business)Journal of evolutionary biology
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Chemosensory Recognition of Familiar and Unfamiliar Conspecifics by Juveniles of the Iberian Wall Lizard Podarcis hispanica

2002

Chemosensory recognition of familiar conspecifics has been reported in studies with members of several lizard families and may be advantageous to distinguish between intruders and neighbors or group members. However,few species have been studied and information on the ability to discriminate between familiar and unfamiliar conspecifics by chemosensory means is lacking for most lizard families. In this paper we ask whether juveniles of the Iberian wall lizard Podarcis hispanica (Lacertidae),can discriminate between chemical signals from familiar conspecifics with whom they have shared a terrarium for several months and those from unfamiliar conspecifics housed in a different terrarium. Exper…

CommunicationLizardbusiness.industryCaptivityZoologyTerrariumBiologybiology.organism_classificationPodarcis hispanicabiology.animalPheromoneLacertidaeAnimal Science and ZoologyAnimal communicationSauriabusinessEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEthology
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Animals in translation: why there is meaning (but probably no message) in animal communication

2010

CommunicationSignal designbusiness.industryAnimal Science and ZoologyAnimal communicationMeaning (existential)businessPsychologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsAnimal Behaviour
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Decreased sexual signalling reveals reduced viability in small populations of the drumming wolf spider Hygrolycosa rubrofasciata.

2004

One of the important goals in conservation biology is to determine reliable indicators of population viability. Sexual traits have been suggested to indicate population extinction risk, because they may be related to viability through condition dependence. Moreover, condition-dependent sexual traits may be more sensitive indicators of population viability than early life-history traits, because deleterious fitness effects of inbreeding tend to be expressed mainly at the end of the species' life history. However, empirical evidence of the significance of sexual behaviour for population viability is missing. In this study, we examined two male sexual traits and survival in 39 different-sized …

Conservation of Natural ResourcesOffspringmedia_common.quotation_subjectPopulationPopulation DynamicsBiologyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyCourtshipSexual Behavior AnimalAnimalsBody Weights and MeasureseducationFinlandGeneral Environmental Sciencemedia_commoneducation.field_of_studySex CharacteristicsGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyReproductive successReproductionSmall population sizeSpidersGeneral MedicineAnimal CommunicationMate choiceSexual selectionRegression AnalysisGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesInbreedingDemographyResearch ArticleProceedings. Biological sciences
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Conditions for the spread of conspicuous warning signals: A numerical model with novel insights

2007

The initial evolution of conspicuous warning signals presents an evolutionary problem because selection against rare conspicuous signals is presumed to be strong, and new signals are rare when they first arise. Several possible solutions have been offered to solve this apparent evolutionary paradox, but disagreement persists over the plausibility of some of the proposed mechanisms. In this paper, we construct a deterministic numerical simulation model that allows us to derive the strength of selection on novel warning signals in a wide range of biologically relevant situations. We study the effects of predator psychology (learning, rate of mistaken attacks, and neophobia) on selection. We a…

EcologyNeophobiaAposematismBiologymedicine.diseaseAdaptation PhysiologicalBiological EvolutionModels BiologicalPredationThreshold numberAnimal CommunicationPredatory BehaviormedicineSelective advantageGeneticsAnimalsLearningComputer SimulationSeasonsDetection rateGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesPredatorSelection (genetic algorithm)Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematics
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