The Rare Cry For Help: First Record of An Agonistic Call From A Snake In South America

Autor: Igor Yuri Fernandes, Esteban Diego Koch, Alexander Tamanini Mônico
Rok vydání: 2022
DOI: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-1204716/v1
Popis: Discussions about auditory systems and sound dynamics in snakes are frequent. The known frequency of sounds produced by snakes ranges from 0.2 - 7.5 KHz, ranging from imperceptible sounds to humans to audible and observable squeaks. The hiss and whistles are the most common sound and are not considered vocalizations. During a nocturnal survey on June 13, 2021, in the northern Brazilian Amazon, we observed the first record of vocalization in a South American snake. Emitted by the individual from Dipsas catesbyi has a duration of 0.06 seconds, reaching 3036 Hz in its peak frequency, with an amplitude of 2761 to 4152 Hz of frequency in its main emission. Vocalizations were made during the exhalation of air through the larynx. The modulation differs from all patterns observed for snakes resembling the agonistic call of anuran amphibians, which could characterize an evolutionary mimicry of this behavior. Vocal emission via the larynx can generate internal vibrations perceptible to the auditory system of snakes, which, when vocalizing, vibrate the laryngeal cartilage and vocal cord. Our hypothesis is that structured vocal emission through laryngeal air exhalation may be a characteristic shared by other species of the Colubridae family.
Databáze: OpenAIRE