Multitasking males and multiplicative females: dynamic signalling and receiver preferences in Cope’s grey treefrog

The ‘multitasking hypothesis’ for complex signal function predicts performance trade-offs between signal components that negatively covary (e.g. due to energetic or mechanical constraints) and receiver preferences for more extreme values of the negatively covarying components that are difficult to produce simultaneously. We tested these two predictions in Cope’s grey treefrogs, Hyla chrysoscelis. In a field […]

Call intensity is a repeatable and dominant acoustic feature determining male call attractiveness in a field cricket

Acoustic signal variation and female preference for different signal components constitute the prerequisite framework to study the mechanisms of sexual selection that shape acoustic communication. Despite several studies of acoustic communication in crickets, information on both male calling song variation in the field and female preference in the same system is lacking for most species. […]