Arginine vasotocin affects vocal behavior but not selective responses to conspecific calls in male túngara frogs
- PMID: 33197465
- DOI: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2020.104891
Arginine vasotocin affects vocal behavior but not selective responses to conspecific calls in male túngara frogs
Abstract
Arginine vasotocin (AVT) and its homolog arginine vasopressin (AVP) modulate social behavior, including social communication. In anuran amphibians, male-male competition and female mate choice rely heavily on acoustic signaling. Behavioral experiments show that AVT influences motivation to call and vocal production. It may also influence how males process and respond to socially relevant auditory stimuli, but few studies have explored this possibility in this taxon. Túngara frogs produce a "whine" that is used for species recognition; in competition with other males they append one or more attractive "chucks" to the whine. Frequency modulation in the whine is an important cue for recognizing conspecifics, and gating of conspecific signals begins in the auditory midbrain. We used dynamic playback experiments to investigate the effects of exogenous AVT on males' responses to stimuli with species-typical and altered frequency modulation. We used avoidance of call overlap as evidence that a male recognizes a stimulus as salient and the production of attractive chucks as evidence of his competitive response to a proximate rival. We used call rate, whine duration, and whine frequency as measures of motivation and motor production. Males responded selectively to a stimulus with species-typical frequency modulation. Following treatment with AVT, they increased call rate and altered whines and chucks in a way that suggests increased air flow during the whine. We did not, however, find evidence that treatment with AVT alters the salience of frequency modulation in recognizing and responding to acoustic signals, at least for the stimuli used in this study.
Keywords: AVT; Advertisement call; Animal communication; Anuran; Arginine vasotocin; Frog; Physalaemus (=Engystomops) pustulosus; Túngara frog.
Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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