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Hurry up and sing: early onset of diel calling behaviour and ecological drivers of calling behaviour of Acanthoplus discoidalis

Aileen C. van der Mescht, Chanel Lewis, Runè van der Merwe & Daryl Codron (2023). Hurry up and sing: early onset of diel calling behaviour and ecological drivers of calling behaviour of Acanthoplus discoidalis. Bioacoustics, Volume 32 (3): 284 -300

 

Abstract: 

Animals adopt circadian rhythms and diel calling patterns to ensure successful breeding, avoid predators, and reduce intra- and inter-species competition. We determine the diel calling behaviour of the bush cricket, Acanthoplus discoidalis, across different vegetation types in the southern Kalahari, and whether any variation in calling behaviour exists across the different regions of the landscape. We identify potential environmental drivers impacting its calling behaviour, as well as any impact temperature and wind may have on the species’ calling behaviour. Acanthoplus discoidalis was recorded singing in all vegetation types, calling starts around 10h00 and ceases at 00h00, with a peak from 15h00 to 23h00, a longer peak than expected based on previous studies. This pattern was consistent across all vegetation types, although calling intensity was less in mountainous, rocky, and windy areas. A likely explanation for the expanded diel pattern is that sampling occurred during a mass emergence of the species, and so a wider temporal niche could be a response to reduce intraspecies competition for females. Furthermore, this diel calling pattern may reduce encounters with predators, which are typically either strictly nocturnal or diurnal, yet it is likely this species relies on physical defences over acoustic adaptations to avoid predation.

Keywords: 

Orthoptera, Tettigoniidae, calling times, acoustic behaviour

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