Ls. Runkle et al., INDIVIDUAL, NIGHTLY, AND SEASONAL-VARIATION IN CALLING BEHAVIOR OF THE GRAY TREE FROG, HYLA-VERSICOLOR - IMPLICATIONS FOR ENERGY-EXPENDITURE, Behavioral ecology, 5(3), 1994, pp. 318-325
We investigated individual, nightly, and seasonal variation in calling
behavior of a population of gray tree frogs (Hyla versicolor) from Co
nnecticut, USA. Repeated recordings of individual males on seven night
s revealed significant differences among males in calling rate on all
but one night and differences in number of pulses per call and number
of pulses produced per hour (pulse effort) on four nights. Most males
reduced calling activity late at night (after 2230 h), but some mainta
ined a relatively steady rate of call production before dropping out o
f the chorus. Data collected for 26 individuals recorded on three or m
ore nights throughout the breeding season revealed significant differe
nces among males in calling rate, number of pulses per call, and pulse
effort, but repeatabilities for all three variables were low (0.17, 0
.35, and 0.12, respectively). The highest repeatability was for number
of pulses per call, a variable strongly influenced by proximity to ca
lling neighbors, probably because males often interacted with neighbor
s at similar distances on several successive nights. Males tended to r
educe the number of pulses per call as the season progressed and the d
istance between neighbors decreased, but they showed no clear seasonal
change in calling rate or pulse effort. There was a substantial seaso
nal decline in the number of hours of chorus activity, resulting in a
median decrease of 43% in nightly energy expenditure by calling males.