INVESTIGADORES
RUIZ MONACHESI mario Ricardo
artículos
Título:
Complex distress calls sound frightening: the case of the weeping lizard
Autor/es:
RUIZ MONACHESI, MARIO RICARDO; LABRA, ANTONIETA
Revista:
ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR
Editorial:
ACADEMIC PRESS LTD-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
Referencias:
Lugar: Amsterdam; Año: 2020 vol. 165 p. 71 - 77
ISSN:
0003-3472
Resumen:
Individuals of many species utter distress calls when are attacked or trapped by an predator. These vocalizations can help them to escape, but may also help conspecificsto reduce their predation risk, by inducing antipredator behaviours. Calls can encode information that modulates these antipredator responses, and the non-linearity and fear hypothesis proposes that complex nonlinear calls may trigger more fearful responses, because they encode higher levels of stress. We test this hypothesis with the weeping lizard, Liolaemus chiliensis, which utters distress calls with and without nonlinear phenomena (complex and simple calls, respectively), and conspecifics respond to simple calls with antipredator behaviors. Here, we evaluate whether this species discriminates between these two types of calls, predicting higher levels of fear with complex calls. We also test whether lizards experience less fear if calls are perceived in a safe environment, such as one full of own scents (home). Our playback experiments showed that complex calls scared the lizards more than simple calls, triggering a reduction of activity, and prolonging attempts to escape. Lizards in their own-scented environments took longer to restore their activity after hearing complex than simple calls, suggesting that this combination of stimuli was more alarming. We postulate that the predation event was unexpected at home, which together with the non-linearity of the call made a more frightening event for the lizards.