Explosive breeding in tropical anurans: environmental triggers, community composition and acoustic structure

Archive ouverte

Ulloa, Juan-Sebastian | Aubin, Thierry | Llusia, Diego | Courtois, Elodie, A | Fouquet, Antoine | Gaucher, Philippe | Pavoine, Sandrine | Sueur, Jérôme

Edité par CCSD ; BioMed Central -

International audience. Background: Anurans largely rely on acoustic communication for sexual selection and reproduction. While multiple studies have focused on the calling activity patterns of prolonged breeding assemblages, species that concentrate their reproduction in short-time windows, explosive breeders, are still largely unknown, probably because of their ephemeral nature. In tropical regions, multiple species of explosive breeders may simultaneously aggregate leading to massive, mixed and dynamic choruses. To understand the environmental triggers, the phenology and composition of these choruses, we collected acoustic and environmental data at five ponds in French Guiana during a rainy season, assessing acoustic communities before and during explosive breeding events.Results: We detected in each pond two explosive breeding events, lasting between 24 and 70 h. The rainfall during the previous 48 h was the most important factor predicting the emergence of these events. During explosive breeding events, we identified a temporal factor that clearly distinguished pre- and mid-explosive communities. A common pool of explosive breeders co-occurred in most of the events, namely Chiasmocleis shudikarensis, Trachycephalus coriaceus and Ceratophrys cornuta. Nevertheless, the species composition was remarkably variable between ponds and for each pond between the first and the second events. The acoustic structure of explosive breeding communities had outlying levels of amplitude and unexpected low acoustic diversity, significantly lower than the communities preceding explosive breeding events.Conclusions: Explosive breeding communities were tightly linked with specific rainfall patterns. With climate change increasing rainfall variability in tropical regions, such communities may experience significant shifts in their timing, distribution and composition. In structurally similar habitats, located in the same region without obvious barriers, our results highlight the variation in composition across explosive breeding events. The characteristic acoustic structure of explosive breeding events stands out from the circadian acoustic environment being easily detected at long distance, probably reflecting behavioural singularities and conveying heterospecific information announcing the availability of short-lived breeding sites. Our data provides a baseline against which future changes, possibly linked to climate change, can be measured, contributing to a better understanding on the causes, patterns and consequences of these unique assemblages.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Monitoring the acoustic activity of an aquatic insect population in relation to temperature, vegetation and noise

Archive ouverte | Desjonquères, Camille | CCSD

International audience. Acoustic population monitoring is a noninvasive method that can be deployed continuously over long periods of time and at large spatial scales. One of the newly discovered threats acting on b...

Monitoring canopy bird activity in disturbed landscapes with automatic recorders: A case study in the tropics

Archive ouverte | Ducrettet, Manon | CCSD

Also known as : Acoustic monitoring of the White-throated Toucan (Ramphastos tucanus) in disturbed tropical landscapes. International audience. Tropical forests are facing threats that may affect the dynamics of see...

Simulated chorus attracts conspecific and heterospecific Amazonian explosive breeding frogs

Archive ouverte | Fouquet, Antoine | CCSD

International audience. In tropical regions, some anuran species breed "explosively", reproducing in massive and highly diverse aggregations during a brief window of time. These aggregations can serve as acoustic be...

Chargement des enrichissements...