AI Article Synopsis

  • Many animal species, notably orthopterans like crickets and katydids, utilize noticeable sounds to attract mates and fend off predators, though some katydids in Neotropical forests have evolved to produce very short sound signals to evade predation.
  • The study investigates how these katydids find mates in complex rainforests, proposing that besides acoustic signals, sharing host plant species may help in mate detection.
  • Using DNA barcoding to analyze katydid diets, researchers discovered that these insects do not specialize in certain plants but instead eat a wide variety across many plant families, hinting that their mate-finding might be influenced by the timing of food resource availability.

Article Abstract

Many well-studied animal species use conspicuous, repetitive signals that attract both mates and predators. Orthopterans (crickets, katydids, and grasshoppers) are renowned for their acoustic signals. In Neotropical forests, however, many katydid species produce extremely short signals, totaling only a few seconds of sound per night, likely in response to predation by acoustically orienting predators. The rare signals of these katydid species raises the question of how they find conspecific mates in a structurally complex rainforest. While acoustic mechanisms, such as duetting, likely facilitate mate finding, we test the hypothesis that mate finding is further facilitated by colocalization on particular host plant species. DNA barcoding allows us to identify recently consumed plants from katydid stomach contents. We use DNA barcoding to test the prediction that katydids of the same species will have closely related plant species in their stomach. We do not find evidence for dietary specialization. Instead, katydids consumed a wide mix of plants within and across the flowering plants (27 species in 22 genera, 16 families, and 12 orders) with particular representation in the orders Fabales and Laurales. Some evidence indicates that katydids may gather on plants during a narrow window of rapid leaf out, but additional investigations are required to determine whether katydid mate finding is facilitated by gathering at transient food resources.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8974511PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/d14020152DOI Listing

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