Screaming Calls of Leptodactylus savagei (Smoky Jungle Frog) Function as an Alarm for Conspecifics
Neotropical frogs in the family Leptodactylidae frequently emit a loud scream upon being captured by predators, and the leptodactylid scream call was first classified as a distress call functioning to startle would-be predators into releasing prey frogs. Other authors, however, have suggested that scream calls function to warn nearby conspecifics of a predator threat (i.e., an alarm call) and/or to attract larger secondary predators to distract and/or predate the primary predator. In this study, we used a repeated-measures playback experiment to test whether Leptodactylus savagei (Smoky Jungle Frog) in Costa Rica responds to scream calls in ways consistent with the call functioning as an alarm. If scream calls emitted by individuals during predation events serve to warn nearby conspecifics of a predator threat, we predicted that scream calls would elicit elevated flight responses compared to when individuals are exposed to advertisement calls or control grey-noise treatments. We observed five primary behavioral responses: individuals flattened their bodies, faced their dens, fled into the dens, faced the audio treatment, and called back with a territorial vocalization. Behavioral responses differed by treatment: scream calls elicited a greater proportion of flight responses whereas advertisement calls caused individuals to demonstrate more interest in the call (particularly females). Our results suggest that L. savagei respond to screaming calls from conspecifics by fleeing in ways consistent with the call functioning as an alarm. Future studies are needed to test whether scream calls also function as a distress call and/or to attract secondary predators.Abstract

This study was performed at La Selva Biological Station, a private research reserve in lowland wet tropical forests on the Caribbean slope of Costa Rica. (A) Map of political boundaries in lower Central America including Costa Rica; (B) map of Costa Rica including major cities and the study site.

Behavioral responses of female (A) and male (B) Leptodactylus savagei (Smoky Jungle Frogs) in response to simulated conspecific advertisement calls, conspecific scream calls, and control grey-noise treatments at La Selva Biological Station, Costa Rica. The y-axis is scaled by the percentage of observations; the raw number of observations is included within each histogram box.
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