Literature Cited to accompany Animal Communication, 2e



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Chapter 1 Literature Cited 

 

 



 

 

 



65 

Palacios, V., E. Font, and R. Marquez. 2007. Iberian wolf howls: Acoustic 

structure, individual variation, and a comparison with North American populations. 

Journal of Mammalogy 88: 606–613. 

 

66 

Parejo, D. and J. M. Aviles. 2007. Do avian brood parasites eavesdrop on 

heterospecific sexual signals revealing host quality? A review of the evidence. 



Animal Cognition 10: 81–88. 

 

67 

Peake, T. M., A. M. R. Terry, P. K. McGregor, and T. Dabelsteen. 2002. Do great 

tits assess rivals by combining direct experience with information gathered by 

eavesdropping? Proceedings of the Royal Society B-Biological Sciences 269: 1925–

1929. 


 

68 

Pepperberg, I. M. 1999. The Alex Studies: Cognitive and Communicative Abilities 



of Grey Parrots. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. 

 

69 

Plath, M., D. Blum, I. Schlupp, and R. Tiedemann. 2008. Audience effect alters 

mating preferences in a livebearing fish, the Atlantic molly, Poecilia mexicana



Animal Behaviour 75: 21–29. 

 

70 

Plath, M., D. Blum, R. Tiedemann, and I. Schlupp. 2008. A visual audience effect 

in a cavefish. Behaviour 145: 931–947. 

 

71 

Rendall, D., M. J. Owren, and M. J. Ryan. 2009. What do animal signals mean? 



Animal Behaviour 78(2): 233–240. 

 

72 

Ridley, A. R., M. F. Child, and M. B. V. Bell. 2007. Interspecific audience effects 

on the alarm-calling behaviour of a kleptoparasitic bird. Biology Letters 3: 589–591. 

 

73 

Ridley, M. 2003. Evolution. Oxford, UK: Wiley-Blackwell. 

 

74 

Riede, T., H. Herzel, D. Mehwald, W. Seidner, E. Trumler, G. Bohme, and G. 

Tembrock. 2000. Nonlinear phenomena in the natural howling of a dog-wolf mix. 

Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 108: 1435–1442. 

 

75 

Schmidt, K. A., S. R. X. Dall, and J. A. van Gils. 2010. The ecology of information: 

an overview on the ecological significance of making informed decisions. Oikos 

119: 304–316. 

 

76 

Scott-Phillips, T. C. 2008. Defining biological communication. Journal of 

Evolutionary Biology 21: 387–395. 

 

77 

Searcy, W. A. and S. Nowicki. 2005. The Evolution of Animal Communication: 

Reliability and Deception in Signaling Systems. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University 

Press. 


 


Chapter 1 Literature Cited 

 

 



 

 

 



78 

Seeley, T. D. 1998. Thoughts on information and integration in honey bee colonies. 



Apidologie 29: 67–80. 

 

79 

Shettleworth, S. J. 2001. Animal cognition and animal behaviour. Animal 

Behaviour 61: 277–286. 

 

80 

Smith, C. L. and C. S. Evans. 2008. Multimodal signaling in fowl, Gallus gallus

Journal of Experimental Biology 211: 2052–2057. 

 

81 

Smith, C. L. and C. S. Evans. 2009. Silent tidbitting in male fowl, Gallus gallus: a 

referential visual signal with multiple functions. Journal of Experimental Biology 

212: 835–842. 

 

82 

Stegmann, U. E. 2005. John Maynard Smith's notion of animal signals. Biology and 

Philosophy 20: 1011–1025. 

 

83 

Stegmann, U. E. 2009. A consumer-based teleosemantics for animal signals. 

Philosophy of Science 76: 864–875. 

 

84 

Szamado, S. 2003. Threat displays are not handicaps. Journal of Theoretical 

Biology 221: 327–348. 

 

85 

Szamado, S. 2008. How threat displays work: species-specific fighting techniques

weaponry and proximity risk. Animal Behaviour 76: 1455–1463. 

 

86 

van Schaik, C. P. and F. Aureli. 2000. The natural history of valuable relationships 

in primates. In Natural Conflict Resolution (F. Aureli and F. B.M. de Waal, eds.), 

pp. 307–333. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. 

 

87 

VanKampen, H. S. 1997. Courtship food-calling in Burmese red junglefowl. 2. 

Sexual conditioning and the role of the female. Behaviour 134: 775–787. 

 

88 

Vehrencamp, S. L. 2000. Hanicap, index, and conventional signal elements of bird 

song. In Animal Signals: Signalling and Signal Design in Animal Communication 

(Y. Espmark, T. Amundsen, and G. Rosenqvist, eds.), pp. 277–300. Trondheim

Norway: Tapir Academic Press. 

 

89 

Wiley, R. H. 1994. Errors, exaggeration, and deception in animal communication. 

In Behavioral Mechanisms in Evolutionary Biology (L. A. Real, ed.), pp. 157–189. 

Chicago, IL: Chicago University Press. 

 

90 

Williamson, D. I. and S. E. Vickers. 2007. The origins of larvae. American Scientist 

95: 509–517. 



Principles of Animal Communication, Second Edition 

Jack W. Bradbury and Sandra L. Vehrencamp 

 

Chapter 2: Sound and Sound Signal Production 

 

 

Literature Cited 

 

1 

Aicher, B. and J. Tautz. 1990. Vibrational communication in the fiddler crabUca 

pugilator. 1. Signal transmission through the substratum. Journal of Comparative 

Physiology A-Sensory Neural and Behavioral Physiology 166: 345–353. 

 

2 

Alcock, J. and W. J. Bailey. 1995. Acoustical communication and the mating 

system of the Australian whistling moth Hecatesia exultans (Noctuidae, 

Agaristinae). Journal of Zoology 237: 337–352.  

 

3 

Allen, J. A., H. Lang, and J. P. Chapin. 1917. The American Museum Congo 

expedition collection of bats. Bulletins of the American Museum of Natural History 

37: 405–563. 

 

4 

Alonso-Pimentel, H., H. G. Spangler, R. Rogers, and D. R. Papaj. 2000. Acoustic 

component and social context of the wing display of the walnut fly Rhagoletis 



juglandisJournal of Insect Behavior 13: 511–524. 

 

5 

Ames, P. L. 1971. The morphology of the syrinx in passerine birds. Bull. Peabody 

Mus. Nat. Hist. 37: 1–194. 

 

6 

Arcadi, A. C., D. Robert, and C. Boesch. 1998. Buttress drumming by wild 

chimpanzees: Temporal patterning, phrase integration into loud calls, and 

preliminary evidence for individual distinctiveness. Primates 39: 505–518. 

 

7 

Arcadi, A. C., D. Robert, and F. Mugurusi. 2004. A comparison of buttress 

drumming by male chimpanzees from two populations. Primates 45: 135–139. 

 

8 

Archibald, H. L. 1974. Directional differences in the sound intensity of ruffed 

grouse drumming. The Auk 91: 517–521. 

 

9 

Aroyan, J. L., M. A. McDonald, J. C. Webb, J. A. Hildebrand, D. Clark, and J. S. 

Reidenbert. 2000. Acoustic models of sound production and propagation. In 



Hearing in Whales and Dolphins (W. W. L. Au, A. N. Popper, and R. R. Fay, eds.), 

pp. 409–469. New York: Springer Verlag. 

 

10 

Au, W. W. L. and K. Banks. 1998. The acoustics of the snapping shrimp 



Synalpheus parneomeris in Kaneohe Bay. Journal of the Acoustical Society of 

America 103: 41–47. 

 



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