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The calling songs of some katydids (Orthoptera, Tettigonioidea) from the tropical forests of Southeast Asia.

Authors :
MING KAI TAN
DUNCAN, JACOB
WAHAB, RODZAY BIN HAJI ABDUL
CHOW-YANG LEE
JAPIR, RAZY
CHUNG, ARTHUR Y. C.
BAROGA-BARBECHO, JESSICA B.
YAP, SHERYL A.
MONTEALEGRE-Z, FERNANDO
Source :
Journal of Orthoptera Research. 2023, Vol. 32 Issue 1, p1-24. 24p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Katydids produce sound for signaling and communication by stridulation of the tegmina. Unlike crickets, most katydids are known to sing at ultrasonic frequencies. This has drawn interest in the investigation of the biophysics of ultrasonic sound production, detection, evolution, and ecology (including predator-prey interactions) of these katydids. However, most of these studies are based on species from the Neotropics, while little is known about katydid species from the hyperdiverse region of Southeast Asia. To address this, a concerted effort to document, record, and describe the calling songs of Southeast Asian katydids, especially species that call at ultrasonic frequencies, was made. A study spanning two years (2018-2020) in the Malay Peninsula (Singapore and Malaysia), Borneo (Brunei Darussalam and Sabah), and the Philippines revealed previously unknown calls of 24 katydid species from four subfamilies. The calling songs of Southeast Asian katydid species are highly diversified in terms of time and frequency. Call structure can range from isolated syllables (e.g., Holochlora), continuous trills (e.g., Axylus philippinus), to short pulse-trains (e.g., Euanisous teuthroides) and complex echemes (e.g., Conocephalus spp.), with 87.5% of species having ultrasonic peak frequencies and 12.5% being considered extreme ultrasonic callers (peak frequency >40 kHz). The call spectrum ranges from tonal (e.g., spectral entropy is 6.8 in Casigneta sp. 2) to resonant (entropy is 8.8 in Conocephalus cognatus). Of the 24 species whose calls are described here, we imaged and described the soundproducing structures of 18. This study provides a preliminary overview of the acoustic diversity of katydids in Southeast Asia, and the authors hope to inspire further investigation into the bioacoustics of little-known katydids from these areas. Amassing a database of calling songs and soundproducing organ illustrations from different species is important to address taxonomic impediments while advancing our knowledge about the bioacoustics of Southeast Asian katydids. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10826467
Volume :
32
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Orthoptera Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
161457308
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3897/jor.32.84563