Published February 5, 2020 | Version v1
Dataset Open

The origins of acoustic communication in vertebrates

  • 1. Henan Normal University
  • 2. University of Arizona

Description

Acoustic communication is crucial to humans and many other tetrapods, including birds, frogs, crocodilians, and mammals. However, large-scale patterns in its evolution are largely unstudied. Here, we address several fundamental questions about the origins of acoustic communication in terrestrial vertebrates (tetrapods), using phylogenetic methods. We show that origins of acoustic communication are significantly associated with nocturnal activity. We find that acoustic communication does not increase diversification rates, a surprising result given the many speciation-focused studies of frog calls and bird songs. We also demonstrate that the presence of acoustic communication is strongly conserved over time. Finally, we find that acoustic communication evolved independently in most major tetrapod groups, often with remarkably ancient origins (~100–200 million years ago). Overall, we show that the role of ecology in shaping signal evolution applies to surprisingly deep timescales, whereas the role of signal evolution in diversification may not.

Files

Supplementary_Data_5.pdf

Files (8.1 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:07aa477901f28c66d613e0794c910bcf
108.5 kB Download
md5:b1b1bc1c630ba513b707027f16292e48
108.5 kB Download
md5:887928a31ec6e5ab4a37bcf77bd92924
140.6 kB Download
md5:652f23e676bff6916a3ee09a5d6821ab
114.9 kB Download
md5:d292f058cd6a34f0fd3c6992d562f20e
1.9 MB Preview Download
md5:4058297d44070e1065eebf812def7304
1.9 MB Preview Download
md5:1386ea4bd57d5f3de2506694d321f221
1.9 MB Preview Download
md5:a93b5ab2fee97402e39c52ba90981d50
1.9 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Related works