Dept of Biology, Lewis and Clark College | Dr Kenneth Clifton
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Biology
352 Lecture Outline
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The ethology of communication I: Defining communication, recognizing sensory modalities, and understanding the role of physiological and environmental constraints upon communication
The majority of behavioral interactions between animals involve communication using signals or displays
Behavioral displays:
Threat displaysTerritorial or advertisement displays
Structural displays:
Coral Snake
The Red-lipped Parrotfish (Scarus rubroviolaceus): Males develop large, bulbous snouts with age.![]()
Adult male. . . . . . . . . . . . Young fish or female
Many displays involve both behavior and structure
Effective communication is the product of natural selection, so we expect selection for specific kinds of signals to evolve, given the context of the communicative bout.
Sorting out what factors influence the evolution of signals can be a challenge:For example, check out the various types of auditory signals that animals generate when communicating with sound: Visit the Cornell Lab of Ornithology's Macaulay Library for bird song examples, as well as many other animals.
Three basic ways that selection may influence signals
Ecological constraints that arise from specific physical environmental conditions
Physiological constraints on the ways an animal may produce or receive signals
Social constraints that arise from the response of recipients to displays
Defining communication: displays or actions by one individual (actor) that modify the behavior of another (reactor)
Many possible examples using this definition
For this class: the process in which specially designed signals or displays modify the behavior of recipients of the signal or display.
By inference, this involves the provision of information by a sender that can be utilized by a receiver during a response.
Ecological constraints and communication - think chemistry and physics
Communication proceeds along one or more sensory modalities
Chemicals (smell and taste): Dispersal of organic chemicalsRequires individual molecules to move the entire distance between sender and receiver (slows transmission relative to other forms of communication)Currents, diffusion, boundary layers.
Molecular vibration: Propagation of pressure waves through a molecular medium (no sounds in a vacuum).
Sound (longitudinal pressure waves) vs Touch (both transverse and longitudinal pressure waves... can include heat)Characteristics of sound: amplitude and frequency (speed of propagation depends on medium)
Attenuation (more ordered than diffusion), interference, reflection, refraction, and absorptionDoppler shifts (not significant for most communication)
Linearity of sound within liquid and gas allows recipients to extract a specific signal from many sounds (complex waveforms can be broken down into component waveforms)
Light (vision): Propagation of a type of electromagnetic energy
Characteristics of light: frequency or wavelength (speed of propagation is constant), intensity (brightness)As with sound: reflection, refraction, and diffusionStraight line transmission.
"Visible" light and the spectrum of light energy as a function of wavelength
Polarization - the orientation of the wave form
Electrical (aquatic habitats only... air insulates)
Characteristics of electrical signals: Charge, potential, polarity... the production of fields.Field shapes (monopoles and dipoles)
Production of electrical signals limited to vertebrates
To understand communication, we must consider how these signals are produced, propagated, and received... again, know some basic physics and chemistry
We will examine sound, sight, and olfaction (smell/taste)
Sound
Sound production involves three steps.1) Producing vibrations
Monopoles, dipoles, tetrapoles and directionalityPressure (amplitude) depends on vibration speed and volume (size)
Muscle contractions are generally < 1 kHz....
Frequency multipliers
2) Modifying vibrations
Modification via resonators:Source DrivenResponse Driven
3) Coupling vibrations to the propagating medium
In air, thin membranesWhat about water?
Sound propagation
Global attenuation (inverse square rule for all frequencies)Medium absorption (frequency dependent)
Interference and reinforcement
Sound reception
Translating physical energy to electrochemical signals.Particle detectors (many invertebrates: highly directional)
Pressure detectors (many vertebrates, non directional for single receiver)
Pressure differential detectors: (small vertebrates: can provide directionality)
Sight
With visible light rays present, an organism's presence and location can be detected with no active signal production.
Light production:Color production via absorption and reflection of specific frequencies.PigmentsIridescence via interference
Scattering
Bioluminescence
Light propagation between sender and receiver
Attenuation and background noise relative to available lightNo transmission past opaque objects
Light reception:
Contrast (color and spatial pattern), coupled with intensity allow detection vs a background.Sensitivity (maximized by aperture)
Resolution (maximized by focal length)
Ability to focus(accommodation by the lens)
Depth perception
Olfaction
Chemical productionPheromonesScent glands/ducts or packaged in waste: Urine/Feces
"Packaging"
How quickly does the molecule degrade? Volatility/Solubility (molecule size)How is the molecule produced in time (rate): e.g., Pulse vs continuous production
Chemical propagation
DiffusionConcentration
Durability
Still vs moving currents
Chemical reception
Sensitivity vs concentrationSpecificity
Beyond understanding the physics of communication modalities, animal communication requires knowledge about:
The physiological structures used by animals to send and receive signals
Selection upon both sender and recipient with regard to the information being communicated (next lecture)
Both of these may constrain the way in which signals are sent and received
Physiological structures for recieving signals are many and varied: e.g.,
Eyes (visible signals)
Ears and other pressure sensitive structures like hair and feathers (for hearing and touch),
Noses and tongues (for chemical signals),
Lateral lines (for pressure waves or electrical signals).
Similar physiolgical structures have evolved for sending signals, and their design will influence the type of signals that can be sent.
This, in turn, may cause selection for specific types of receivers (e.g. Cricket Frogs).
For example, consider structures for producing sounds in vertebrates:
Sounds produced by air being pushed through a tube past a membrane that is induced to vibrate by four basic forces
Mammals produce sounds with a larynx via the following steps:
1) Muscles pull the vocal chords (glottis) into the center of the larynx and blocks air flow.Note: exhalation is "passive" (exhaled air comes from the relaxation of the diaphram, a muscle sheet below the lungs)2) Air pressure builds up behind the vocal chords and then is released when it becomes too great.
3) Bernoulli forces quickly bring the vocal chords back together, creating periodic air puffs (pressure waves) that travel out the mouth or nose.
4) Period (pitch) is set primarily by vocal chord thickness (130 pulses/sec for men, 220/sec for women)
5) Such sounds have many harmonics, allowing resonant filtering and selective amplification to modify the final signal.
From: Bradbury, J.W. & Veherencamp S.L. 1998 Principles of Animal Communication (p 95)
Here is a video clip of human vocal chords in action
Exceptions to these basic patterns:
Echolocating bats have additional membranes "upstream" of the vocal chordsPorpoises and whales have air sacs in the head: air passing back and forth between lungs, trachea, and these sacs moves across additional membranes.
Frogs and Toads (anurans) also use a larynx to produce sounds: two differences from mammals
1) Another set of thin membranes before the glottis acts as the main source of sounds (similar to echolocating bats).These vibrations are independent of the size of the opening of the glottis and they vibrate and a much higher frequency (0.5 - 2.0 kHz vs. 100-200 Hz).This allows more complicated sound generation, as intial sounds from the vocal chords (first membrates) are modified by the opening of the glottis.
2) Unlike mammals, these vibrations are passed into the throat (buccal) sac.
This can force the air back into the lungs and allows additional control on rates of airflow across the vocal chordsThe buccal sac may also act as a resonating chamber for propagating the signal into the surrounding air
From: Bradbury, J.W. & Veherencamp S.L. 1998 Principles of Animal Communication (p 98)
Birds sounds are produced differently than by anurans and mammals.... as a result they are remarkably more complex.
1) Exhalation is "active"; muscle contractions expel air (= greater control on the rate and force of exhaled air).
Additional, inspiratory muscles allow "mini breaths" during songs.... this allows much longer songs.By itself, this allows for more complicated sound production.
2) Sound production occurs in a modified junction of the bronchi called the syrinx
Missing or reduced cartilage rings are replaced by membranes that may be forced into the airflow by muscles, air pressure, and Bernoulli forces.
3) The location of these vibrating membranes varies among species: e.g. chickens, vs. song birds, vs. cuckoos and penguins.
From: Bradbury, J.W. & Veherencamp S.L. 1998 Principles of Animal Communication (p 102)
Thus, most birds can sing two songs at once. Environmental conditions limit the range of signal possibilities
Physiological constraints (costs) may further limit the degree to which certain signals are expressed
Whether signals may be easily turned on or off (e.g. sounds, movements) as opposed to always on (e.g. plumage patterns) may also be important.
Type of Signal
Chemical Auditory Visual Tactile Electrical Spatial range Long Long Medium Short Medium Rate of signal degradation Slow (relatively) Fast Fast Fast Fast Ability to pass obstacles Good Good Poor Poor Medium "Locatabililty" Variable Medium High High Medium Energetic cost Low High Low Low Medium Evidence for environmental constraints:
Correlation between birdsong type and habitat (open grassland vs. forest)