4.8 Article

Alert signals enhance animal communication in noisy environments

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0807657105

Keywords

animal signals; habitat noise; robotic lizard playbacks; tropical lizard

Funding

  1. National Geographic Society
  2. US National Science Foundation [IOB-0517041/0516998]

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Environmental noise that reduces the probability that animals will detect communicative signals poses a special challenge for long-range communication. The application of signal-detection theory to animal communication lead to the prediction that signals directed at distant receivers in noisy environments will begin with conspicuous alerting components to attract the attention of receivers, before delivery of the information-rich portion of the signal. Whether animals actually adopt this strategy is not clear, despite suggestions that alerts might exist in a variety of taxa. By using a combination of behavioral observations and experimental manipulations with robotic lizard playbacks, we show that free-living territorial Anolis lizards add an alert to visual displays when communicating to distant receivers in situations of poor visibility, and that these introductory alerts in turn enhance signal detection in adverse signaling conditions. Our results show that Anolis lizards are able to evaluate environmental conditions that affect the degradation of long-distance signals and adjust their behavior accordingly. This study demonstrates that free-living animals enhance the efficiency of long-range communication through the modulation of signal design and the facultative addition of an alert. Our findings confirm that alert signals are an important strategy for communicating in noisy conditions and suggest a reexamination of the existence of alerts in other animals relying on long-range communication.

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