AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how accurately an animal's vocal signals reflect its body size, challenging the idea that lower frequency sounds are always linked to larger body sizes due to variations in larynx and body size.
  • Researchers conducted experiments using excised larynges from eleven primate species to analyze the relationship between minimum fundamental frequency (f), body size, and vocal fold length (VFL).
  • The findings reveal that VFL is a stronger predictor of minimum f than body size, suggesting a complex relationship between vocal anatomy and body size in primates, which is important for understanding vocal communication evolution in mammals.

Article Abstract

A fundamental issue in the evolution of communication is the degree to which signals convey accurate ("honest") information about the signaler. In bioacoustics, the assumption that fundamental frequency (f ) should correlate with the body size of the caller is widespread, but this belief has been challenged by various studies, possibly because larynx size and body size can vary independently. In the present comparative study, we conducted excised larynx experiments to investigate this hypothesis rigorously and explore the determinants of f . Using specimens from eleven primate species, we carried out an inter-specific investigation, examining correlations between the minimum f produced by the sound source, body size and vocal fold length (VFL). We found that, across species, VFL predicted minimum f much better than body size, clearly demonstrating the potential for decoupling between larynx size and body size in primates. These findings shed new light on the diversity of primate vocalizations and vocal morphology, highlighting the importance of vocal physiology in understanding the evolution of mammal vocal communication.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5585385PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-11000-xDOI Listing

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