Bush-crickets (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae) generate sound using tegminal stridulation. Signalling effectiveness is affected by the widely varying acoustic parameters of temporal pattern, frequency and spectral purity (tonality). During stridulation, frequency multiplication occurs as a scraper on one wing scrapes across a file of sclerotized teeth on the other. The frequency with which these tooth–scraper interactions occur, along with radiating wing cell resonant properties, dictates both frequency and tonality in the call. Bush-cricket species produce calls ranging from resonant, tonal calls through to non-resonant, broadband signals. The differences are believed to result from differences in file tooth arrangement and wing radiators, but ...
Male crickets produce stridulatory songs using engaged tegmina (forewings): a plectrum on the left s...
Male field crickets emit pure-tone mating calls by rubbing their wings together. Acoustic radiation ...
Many bush crickets (Tettigoniidae) produce calls that consist of trains of transient high-frequency ...
Bush-crickets (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae) generate sound using tegminal stridulation. Signalling eff...
Male crickets and their close relatives bush-crickets (Gryllidae and Tettigoniidae, respectively; Or...
Male field crickets (Orthoptera: Gryllidae) produce acoustic signals by wing stridulation, attractin...
Sound production in crickets relies on stridulation, the well-understood rubbing together of a pair ...
Male bush-crickets produce acoustic signals by wing stridulation to call females. Several species al...
Male field crickets generate calls to attract distant females through tegminal stridulation: the rub...
1. Experimental and theoretical studies on the acoustics of the singing burrow of the mole cricke...
<p>Male field crickets generate calls to attract distant females through tegminal stridulation: the ...
Animals use sound for communication, with high-amplitude signals being selected for attracting mates...
Crickets provide a useful model system to study how animals analyze sound frequency. While much is k...
Physiology, physics, and ecological interactions can generate trade-offs within species, but may als...
Male grigs, bush-crickets and field crickets produce mating calls by tegminal stridulation: the scra...
Male crickets produce stridulatory songs using engaged tegmina (forewings): a plectrum on the left s...
Male field crickets emit pure-tone mating calls by rubbing their wings together. Acoustic radiation ...
Many bush crickets (Tettigoniidae) produce calls that consist of trains of transient high-frequency ...
Bush-crickets (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae) generate sound using tegminal stridulation. Signalling eff...
Male crickets and their close relatives bush-crickets (Gryllidae and Tettigoniidae, respectively; Or...
Male field crickets (Orthoptera: Gryllidae) produce acoustic signals by wing stridulation, attractin...
Sound production in crickets relies on stridulation, the well-understood rubbing together of a pair ...
Male bush-crickets produce acoustic signals by wing stridulation to call females. Several species al...
Male field crickets generate calls to attract distant females through tegminal stridulation: the rub...
1. Experimental and theoretical studies on the acoustics of the singing burrow of the mole cricke...
<p>Male field crickets generate calls to attract distant females through tegminal stridulation: the ...
Animals use sound for communication, with high-amplitude signals being selected for attracting mates...
Crickets provide a useful model system to study how animals analyze sound frequency. While much is k...
Physiology, physics, and ecological interactions can generate trade-offs within species, but may als...
Male grigs, bush-crickets and field crickets produce mating calls by tegminal stridulation: the scra...
Male crickets produce stridulatory songs using engaged tegmina (forewings): a plectrum on the left s...
Male field crickets emit pure-tone mating calls by rubbing their wings together. Acoustic radiation ...
Many bush crickets (Tettigoniidae) produce calls that consist of trains of transient high-frequency ...