Search results for "multimodal signals"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Decoupled Acoustic and Visual Components in the Multimodal Signals of the Common Cuckoo (Cuculus canorus)

2021

Because of its parasitic habits, reproduction costs of the common cuckoo (Cuculus canorus) are mostly spent in pre-laying activities. Female costs are limited to searching host nests and laying eggs, whereas, males spend time in performing intense vocal displays, possibly with territorial purpose. This last aspect, together with a sexual plumage dimorphism, points to both intra- and inter-sexual selections operating within this species. One element triggering sexual selection is a differential fitness accrued by different phenotypes. Before analyzing possible sexual selection mechanisms operating in cuckoos, it is therefore necessary to verify whether there is a variability among male secon…

bioacousticsEcologyEvolutioncuckooQH359-425multimodal signalssexual selectionbioacoustics; courtship rituals; cuckoo; multimodal signals; sexual selectioncuckoo; sexual selection; courtship rituals; bioacoustics; multimodal signalsQH540-549.5courtship rituals
researchProduct

Multimodal Aposematic Signals and Their Emerging Role in Mate Attraction

2018

varoitusväriwarning colourationsaaliseläimetsukupuolivalintapredator-prey interactionsparinvalintapetoeläimetmultimodal signalsta1181sexual selectionsignaalitchemical signalssignal variationFrontiers in Ecology and Evolution
researchProduct

Multimodal Aposematic Signals and Their Emerging Role in Mate Attraction

2018

Chemically defended animals often display conspicuous color patterns that predators learn to associate with their unprofitability and subsequently avoid. Such animals (i.e., aposematic), deter predators by stimulating their visual and chemical sensory channels. Hence, aposematism is considered to be “multimodal.” The evolution of warning signals (and to a lesser degree their accompanying chemical defenses) is fundamentally linked to natural selection by predators. Lately, however, increasing evidence also points to a role of sexual selection shaping warning signal evolution. One of the species in which this has been shown is the wood tiger moth, Arctia plantaginis, which we here put forward…

warning colourationvaroitusvärisaaliseläimetpredator-prey interactionssukupuolivalintaparinvalintapetoeläimetmultimodal signalschemical defencessignaalitchemical signalsarcctia plantaginissignal variation
researchProduct