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Long Recording Sequences: How to Track the Intra-Individual Variability of Acoustic Signals

Recently developed acoustic technologies - like automatic recording units - allow the recording of long sequences in natural environments. These devices are used for biodiversity survey but they could also help researchers to estimate global signal variability at various (individual, population, spe...

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Autores principales: Lengagne, Thierry, Gomez, Doris, Josserand, Rémy, Voituron, Yann
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4430252/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25970183
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0123828
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author Lengagne, Thierry
Gomez, Doris
Josserand, Rémy
Voituron, Yann
author_facet Lengagne, Thierry
Gomez, Doris
Josserand, Rémy
Voituron, Yann
author_sort Lengagne, Thierry
collection PubMed
description Recently developed acoustic technologies - like automatic recording units - allow the recording of long sequences in natural environments. These devices are used for biodiversity survey but they could also help researchers to estimate global signal variability at various (individual, population, species) scales. While sexually-selected signals are expected to show a low intra-individual variability at relatively short time scale, this variability has never been estimated so far. Yet, measuring signal variability in controlled conditions should prove useful to understand sexual selection processes and should help design acoustic sampling schedules and to analyse long call recordings. We here use the overall call production of 36 male treefrogs (Hyla arborea) during one night to evaluate within-individual variability in call dominant frequency and to test the efficiency of different sampling methods at capturing such variability. Our results confirm that using low number of calls underestimates call dominant frequency variation of about 35% in the tree frog and suggest that the assessment of this variability is better by using 2 or 3 short and well-distributed records than by using samples made of consecutive calls. Hence, 3 well-distributed 2-minutes records (beginning, middle and end of the calling period) are sufficient to capture on average all the nightly variability, whereas a sample of 10 000 consecutive calls captures only 86% of it. From a biological point of view, the call dominant frequency variability observed in H. arborea (116Hz on average but up to 470 Hz of variability during the course of the night for one male) challenge about its reliability in mate quality assessment. Automatic acoustic recording units will provide long call sequences in the near future and it will be then possible to confirm such results on large samples recorded in more complex field conditions.
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spelling pubmed-44302522015-05-21 Long Recording Sequences: How to Track the Intra-Individual Variability of Acoustic Signals Lengagne, Thierry Gomez, Doris Josserand, Rémy Voituron, Yann PLoS One Research Article Recently developed acoustic technologies - like automatic recording units - allow the recording of long sequences in natural environments. These devices are used for biodiversity survey but they could also help researchers to estimate global signal variability at various (individual, population, species) scales. While sexually-selected signals are expected to show a low intra-individual variability at relatively short time scale, this variability has never been estimated so far. Yet, measuring signal variability in controlled conditions should prove useful to understand sexual selection processes and should help design acoustic sampling schedules and to analyse long call recordings. We here use the overall call production of 36 male treefrogs (Hyla arborea) during one night to evaluate within-individual variability in call dominant frequency and to test the efficiency of different sampling methods at capturing such variability. Our results confirm that using low number of calls underestimates call dominant frequency variation of about 35% in the tree frog and suggest that the assessment of this variability is better by using 2 or 3 short and well-distributed records than by using samples made of consecutive calls. Hence, 3 well-distributed 2-minutes records (beginning, middle and end of the calling period) are sufficient to capture on average all the nightly variability, whereas a sample of 10 000 consecutive calls captures only 86% of it. From a biological point of view, the call dominant frequency variability observed in H. arborea (116Hz on average but up to 470 Hz of variability during the course of the night for one male) challenge about its reliability in mate quality assessment. Automatic acoustic recording units will provide long call sequences in the near future and it will be then possible to confirm such results on large samples recorded in more complex field conditions. Public Library of Science 2015-05-13 /pmc/articles/PMC4430252/ /pubmed/25970183 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0123828 Text en © 2015 Lengagne et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lengagne, Thierry
Gomez, Doris
Josserand, Rémy
Voituron, Yann
Long Recording Sequences: How to Track the Intra-Individual Variability of Acoustic Signals
title Long Recording Sequences: How to Track the Intra-Individual Variability of Acoustic Signals
title_full Long Recording Sequences: How to Track the Intra-Individual Variability of Acoustic Signals
title_fullStr Long Recording Sequences: How to Track the Intra-Individual Variability of Acoustic Signals
title_full_unstemmed Long Recording Sequences: How to Track the Intra-Individual Variability of Acoustic Signals
title_short Long Recording Sequences: How to Track the Intra-Individual Variability of Acoustic Signals
title_sort long recording sequences: how to track the intra-individual variability of acoustic signals
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4430252/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25970183
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0123828
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