Male vocal behavior and phylogeny in deer.

Cladistics

Department of Psychology, School of Life Sciences, University of Sussex, Brighton BN19QH, UK.

Published: December 2008

The phylogenetic relationships among 11 species of the Cervidae family were inferred from an analysis of male vocalizations. Eighteen characters, including call types (e.g. antipredator barks, mating loudcalls) and acoustic characteristics (call composition, fundamental frequency and formant frequencies), were used for phylogeny inference. The resulting topology and the phylogenetic consistency of behavioral characters were compared with those of current molecular phylogenies of Cervidae and with separate and simultaneous parsimony analyses of molecular and behavioral data. Our results indicate that male vocalizations constitute plausible phylogenetic characters in this taxon. Evolutionary scenarios for the vocal characters are discussed in relation with associated behaviors.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1096-0031.2008.00223.xDOI Listing

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