Literature Cited to accompany Animal Communication, 2e



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Chapter 3 Literature Cited 

 



11 

Aubin, T. and P. Jouventin. 2002. Localisation of an acoustic signal in a noisy 

environment: the display call of the king penguin Aptenodytes patagonicusJournal 



of Experimental Biology 205: 3793–3798. 

 

12 

Authier, S. and G. A. Manley. 1995. A model of frequency tuning in the basilar 

papilla of the tokay gecko, Gekko geckoHearing Research 82: 1–13. 

 

13 

Aylor, D. 1971. Noise reduction by vegetation and ground. Journal of the 



Acoustical Society of America 51: 197–205. 

 

14 

Badyaev, A. V. and E. S. Leaf. 1997. Habitat associations of song characteristics in 

Phylloscopus and Hippolais warblers. Auk 114: 40–46. 

 

15 

Bailey, W. J., R. J. Cunningham, and I. Lebel. 1990. Song power, spectral 

distribution, and female phonotaxis in the bushcricket Requena verticalis 

(Tettigoniidae, Orthoptera); active female choice or passive attraction. Animal 



Behaviour 40: 33–42. 

 

16 

Bailey, W. J. 1991. Acoustic Behavior of Insects: An evolutionary Perspective

London: Chapman and Hall.  

 

17 

Bailey, W. J. 2003. Insect duets: underlying mechanisms and their evolution. 



Physiological Entomology 28: 157–174. 

 

18 

Bárány, E. 1938. A contribution to the physiology of bone conduction. Acta 

Otolaryngologica (Stockholm) Supplement 26: 1–223. 

 

19 

Barth, F. G. 1998. The vibrational sense of spiders. In Comparative Hearing: 

Insects (R. R. Hoy, A. N. Popper, and R. R. Fay, eds.), pp. 228–278. New York: 

Springer. 

 

20 

Barth, F. G. 2002. A Spider's World: Senses and Behavior. Berlin: Springer.  

 

21 

Barth, F. G. 2004. Spider mechanoreceptors. Current Opinion in Neurobiology 14: 

415–422. 

 

22 

Bell, P. D. 1980. Transmission of vibrations along plant stems: implications for 

insect communication. Journal of the New York Entomological Society 88: 210–

216. 

 

23 



Bennet-Clark, H. C. 1971. Acoustics of insect song. Nature 234: 255–259. 

 

24 

Bennet-Clark, H. C. 1989. Songs and the physics of sound production. In Cricket 

Behavior and Neurobiology (F. Huber, T. E. Moore, and W. Loher, eds.), pp. 227–

261. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. 

 



Chapter 3 Literature Cited 

 



25 

Bennet-Clark, H. C. 1998. Size and scale effects as constraints in insect sound 

communication. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London Series 



B-Biological Sciences 353: 407–419. 

 

26 

Berg, A. and M. D. Greenfield. 2005. Sexual selection in insect choruses: 

Influences of call power and relative timing. Journal of Insect Behavior 18: 59–75. 

 

27 

Bergmann, H. H. 1978. Correlations between habitat structure and motif song in 

European warblers genus SylviaJournal für Ornithologie 119: 236–237. 

 

28 

Bertilone, D. C. and D. S. Killeen. 2001. Statistics of biological noise and 

performance of generalized energy detectors for passive detection. Ieee Journal of 



Oceanic Engineering 26: 285–294. 

 

29 

Bleckmann, H. 1988. Prey identification and prey localization in surface-feeding 

fish and fishing spiders. In Sensory Biology of Aquatic Animals (J. Atema, R. R. 

Fay, A. N. Popper, and W. N. Tavolga, eds.), pp. 619–641. New York: Springer-

Verlag. 


 

30 Bleckmann, 

H. 


1994. 

Reception of hydrodynamic stimuli in aquatic and 

semiaquatic animals. Stuttgart: Fischer.  

 

31 

Blumstein, D. T. and A. C. Turner. 2005. Can the acoustic adaptation hypothesis 

predict the structure of Australian birdsong? Acta Ethologica 8: 35–44. 

 

32 

Boebel, O., P. Clarkson, R. Coates, R. Larter, P. E. O'Brien, J. Ploetz, C. 

Summerhayes, T. Tyack, D. W. H. Walton, and D. Wartzok. 2005. Risks posed to 

the Antarctic marine environment by acoustic instruments: a structured analysis. 



Antarctic Science 17: 533–540. 

 

33 

Boncoraglio, G. and N. Saino. 2007. Habitat structure and the evolution of bird 

song: a meta-analysis of the evidence for the acoustic adaptation hypothesis. 



Functional Ecology 21: 134–142. 

 

34 

Bowman, R. I. 1979. Adaptive morphology of song dialects in Darwin's finches. 

Journal für Ornithologie 120: 353–389. 

 

35 

Boyles, C. A. 1984. Acoustic Waveguides: Applications to Oceanic Science. New 

York: Wiley.  

 

36 

Breckow, J. and M. Sippel. 1985. Mechanics of the transduction of sound in the 

tymbal organ of adults and larvae of locusts. Journal of Comparative Physiology A-

Sensory Neural and Behavioral Physiology 157: 619–629. 

 



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