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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
The painted goby Pomatoschistus pictus emits courtship sounds (drums) that are important in reproductive outcome.
The effect of temperature (14–22 °C) on courtship drum features was characterised. Pulse period (or rate)
was linearly related with temperature (R2 = 0.83) presenting a Q10 of 2.13. Pulse period decreased by 1.95 ms per
1 °C and varied from 34 ms to 18.6 ms within the studied temperature range. Sound duration changed concomitantly
from 1128 ms to 658 ms. Changes in sound duration were due to pulse period rather than pulse number,
since the latter was not affected by temperature. Pulse duration was similarly affected by temperature, decreasing
by 0.3 ms per 1 °C (R2 = 0.51, Q10 = 1.45) and changing from 10.0 ms at 14 °C to 7.5 ms at 22 °C. Drum
emission rate, sound amplitude, fatigue and dominant frequency were also not related to temperature. The
temperature effect on pulse rate likely reflects temperature-dependence of the vocal central pattern generator
as observed in other animals. In contrast, shorter pulse durations likely result from temperature effects at the
peripheral level of the vocal system, as muscle twitches typically shorten with rising temperatures. Because
pulse rate is likely important in mate choice and conspecific recognition in fish, including P. pictus, future studies
are needed to understand if temperature-related changes in pulse rate are coupled with changes in mate
preference as found in insects and anurans.
Description
Keywords
Temperature Acoustic communication Pulse rate Reproduction Gobiidae Teleost fish
Citation
Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, 473, 1–6. doi: 10.1016/j.jembe.2015.08.003
Publisher
Elsevier