Bicheng Zhu

Bicheng Zhu
Chengdu Institute of Biology

Doctor of Philosophy

About

27
Publications
3,703
Reads
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155
Citations
Citations since 2017
22 Research Items
155 Citations
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201720182019202020212022202301020304050
201720182019202020212022202301020304050
Additional affiliations
September 2016 - June 2019
Chinese Academy of Sciences
Position
  • PhD Student
Description
  • Thesis title: The function and evolution of multimodal mating signals in treefrog Supervisors: Prof. Yezhong Tang, Prof. Jianguo Cui
September 2013 - June 2016
Chinese Academy of Sciences
Position
  • Master's Student
Description
  • Thesis title: Vocal communication of serrate-legged small treefrogs, Kurixalus odontotarsus Supervisors: Prof. Yezhong Tang, Prof. Jianguo Cui

Publications

Publications (27)
Article
Full-text available
Human disturbance, particularly road traffic, is one of the greatest threats to wildlife. Considering the association between alerting behavior and the survival of animals, it is important to study the effects of road traffic on alerting behavior of wildlife. Previous studies assessing the short-term impact of road traffic on alerting behavior of w...
Article
Full-text available
Animals have evolved sophisticated temperature sensing systems and mechanisms to detect and respond to ambient temperature changes. As a relict species endemic to the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, hot-spring snake (Thermophis baileyi) survived the dramatic changes in climate that occurred during plateau uplift and ice ages, providing an excellent opportun...
Article
Animal communication is often hampered by noise interference. Noise masking has primarily been studied in terms of its unimodal effect on sound information provision and use, while little is known about its cross-modal effect and how animals weigh unimodal and multimodal courtship cues in noisy environments. Here, we examined the cross-modal effect...
Article
Full-text available
Communication signals by both human and non-human animals are often interrupted in nature. One advantage of multimodal cues is to maintain the salience of interrupted signals. We studied a frog that naturally can have silent gaps within its call. Using video/audio-playbacks, we presented females with interrupted mating calls with or without a simul...
Article
Full-text available
Mate choice in frogs depends heavily on acoustic communication, and females in many species possess an inherent preference for longer and/or more complex calls. Recently, it has become clear that conspecific chemical cues can also be useful in attracting potential mates in anuran species. However, how conspecific chemical cues influence mate choice...
Article
Full-text available
Background Signal detection is crucial to survival and successful reproduction, and animals often modify behavioral decisions based on information they obtained from the social context. Undeniably, the decision-making in male-male competition and female choice of anurans (frogs and toads) depends heavily on acoustic signals. However, increasing emp...
Article
Full-text available
Both human and nonhuman animals communicating acoustically face the problem of noise interference, especially anurans during mating activities. Previous studies concentrated on the effect of continuous noise on signal recognition, but it is still unknown whether different notes in advertisement calls impaired by noise affect female choice and male–...
Article
Advertisement calls potentially represent honest signals for delimiting species and sexual selection. Quantitative statistics of individual variation in advertisement call properties can be used to predict female preferences for particular signal properties. In this study, advertisement call properties and their individual variation was analyzed in...
Article
Full-text available
Animal choruses, such as those found in insects and frogs, are often intermittent. Thus females sampling males in the chorus might have to remember the location of the potential mates’ calls during periods of silence. Although a number of studies have shown that frogs use and prefer multimodal mating signals, usually acoustic plus visual, it is not...
Article
Full-text available
There is increasing evidence that many anurans use multimodal cues to detect, discriminate and/or locate conspecifics and thus modify their behaviors. To date, however, most studies have focused on the roles of multimodal cues in female choice or male-male interactions. In the present study, we conducted an experiment to investigate whether male se...
Article
Full-text available
The matched filter hypothesis proposes that the auditory sensitivity of receivers should match the spectral energy distribution of the senders’ signals. If so, receivers should be able to distinguish between species-specific and hetero-specific signals. We tested the matched filter hypothesis in two sympatric species, Chiromantis doriae and Feihyla...
Article
Full-text available
The article, “Sometimes noise is beneficial. © 2017 Japan Ethological Society and Springer Japan KK, part of Springer Nature
Article
Full-text available
Male-male vocal competition in anuran species is critical for mating success; however, it is also energetically demanding and highly time-consuming. Thus, we hypothesized that males may change signal elaboration in response to competition in real time. Male serrate-legged small treefrogs (Kurixalus odontotarsus) produce compound calls that contain...
Research
Full-text available
Background The evolution of exaggerated vocal signals in anuran species is an important topic. Males and females have both evolved the ability to discriminate communication sounds. However, the nature of sexual dimorphism in cognition and sensory discrimination and in the evolution and limitation of sexual signal exaggeration remain relatively unex...
Data
Raw data of female phonotaxis tests
Data
Raw data of male evoked vocal response experiments
Article
Full-text available
Many kinds of environmental noise can interfere with acoustic communication and efficient decision making in terrestrial species. Here we identified an exception to this generalization in a streamside species, the little torrent frog (Amolops torrentis) which communicates in a stream noise environment. To determine whether stream noise can act as a...
Article
Full-text available
Anesthesia is known to affect the auditory brainstem response (ABR) in mice, rats, birds and lizards. The present study investigated how the level of anesthesia affects ABR recordings in an amphibian species, Babina daunchina. To do this, we compared ABRs evoked by tone pip stimuli recorded from 35 frogs when Tricaine methane sulphonate (MS-222) an...
Article
Full-text available
Acoustic communication is one of the most important means of communication in anurans. The call behavior of many male frogs has a circadian rhythm that is affected by temperature and relative humidity. In this study, the calls of 61 males of Rhacophorus rhodopus were collected from May to June 2016. We investigated the call structure and circadian...
Article
Full-text available
The matched filter hypothesis proposes that the tuning of auditory sensitivity and the spectral character of calls will match in order to maximize auditory processing efficiency during courtship. In this study, we analyzed the acoustic structure of male calls and both male and female hearing sensitivities in the little torrent frog (Amolops torrent...
Article
Full-text available
It is generally thought that for species using vocal communication the spectral properties of the sender’s calls should match the frequency sensitivity of the receiver’s auditory system. Nevertheless, few studies have investigated both sender and receiver characteristics in anuran species. In the present study, auditory brainstem responses (ABRs) w...
Article
Full-text available
A hallmark of sexual selection by mate choice is the evolution of exaggerated traits, such as longer tails in birds and more acoustic components in the calls of birds and frogs. Trait elaboration can be opposed by costs such as increased metabolism and greater predation risk, but cognitive processes of the receiver can also put a brake on trait ela...
Article
Full-text available
Most species are believed to evolve larger body sizes over evolutionary time. Previous studies have suggested that sexual selection, through male-male competition and female choice, favors larger males. However, there is little evidence of selection against large size. The female serrate-legged small treefrogs (Philautus odontotarsus) must carry pa...
Data
Relationships between body mass and dominant frequency of calls in P. odontotarsus. (PDF)

Questions

Question (1)
Question
Aggressive calls occurred during encounter, fighting and displacement contexts involving physical contact between male frogs. So, is encounter call a kind of aggressive call? What is the difference between aggressive call and encounter call? Looking forward to your answer! Thanks a lot.

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Projects

Project (1)
Project
vocal communication