
Tongliang Wang- Doctor
- Professor (Associate) at Hainan Normal University
Tongliang Wang
- Doctor
- Professor (Associate) at Hainan Normal University
About
42
Publications
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Introduction
Current institution
Publications
Publications (42)
The Burmese python (Python bivittatus) is one of the most endangered pythons and is commonly traded in the international pet industry. In addition to wild P. bivittatus, domesticated individuals from farms have been living on Hainan Island for nearly 20 years. The intentional release or accidental escape of farmed P. bivittatus may lead to risks, s...
Diamondback terrapins ( Malaclemys terrapin centrata ) exhibit strong environmental adaptability and live in both freshwater and saltwater. However, the genetic basis of this adaptability has not been the focus of research. In this study, we successfully constructed a ∼2.21‐Gb chromosome‐level genome assembly for M. t. centrata using high‐coverage...
Noise pollution has been shown to affect wild animals in various ways, but little is known about its consequences at the community level. Investigating animals’ overall vocal responses to noise across multiple sympatric species can reveal the complex nature of noise impacts but is challenging. In this study, we employed social network analysis (SNA...
Sexually dimorphic hearing sensitivity has evolved in many vertebrate species, and the sex with a larger body size typically shows more sensitive hearing. However, generalizing this association is controversial. Research on sexually dimorphic hearing sensitivity contributes to an understanding of auditory sense functions, adaptations, and evolution...
Exposure to noise can cause non-auditory health problems and has been widely studied in mammals such as rats and rabbits. However, the non-auditory effects of noise exposure on reptiles (such as red-eared sliders) remain unclear. In this study, we determined the noise exposure-induced transcriptomic changes in the liver of red-eared slider (Trachem...
Information compression is widely regarded as a fundamental principle that applies to human language. Zipf's law of abbreviation and MenzeratheAltmann's law are two linguistic laws related to information compression and have been demonstrated in human language and other communication systems. Female choice and male-male competition in anurans (frog...
Graptemys ouachitensis (CAGLE, 1953) belongs to the Graptemys genus, the Emydidae family, and the Testudines order. This study involved sequencing the complete mitochondrial genome (mitogenome) of G. ouachitensis using next-generation sequencing, and analyzing the essential characteristics, and phylogenetic relationship. The results revealed that t...
The tympanic middle ear is important for anuran hearing on land. However, many species have partly or entirely lost their tympanic apparatus. Previous studies have compared hearing sensitivities in species that possess and lack tympanic membranes capable of sound production and acoustic communication. However, little is known about how these hearin...
The ability to discriminate relative quantities, one of the numerical competences, is considered an adaptive trait in uncertain environments. Besides humans, previous studies have reported this capacity in several non-human primates and birds. Here, we test whether red-eared sliders (Trachemys scripta elegans) can discriminate different relative qu...
Vocal communication plays an important role in survival, reproduction, and animal social association. Birds and mammals produce complex vocal sequence to convey context-dependent information. Vocalizations are conspicuous features of the behavior of most anuran species (frogs and toads), and males usually alter their calling strategies according to...
The aim of this study was to identify underwater vocalizations in red-eared turtles (Trachemys scripta elegans) and assess differences between sexes and ages. We recorded the underwater vocalizations of the red-eared sliders and identified 12 call types through manual visual and aural inspection of the recordings. Similarity analysis verified that...
Alarm signals and cues are crucial to animal survival and vary greatly across species. Eavesdropping on heterospecific alarm signals and cues can provide eavesdroppers with information about potential threats. In addition to acoustic alarm signals, evidence has accumulated that chemical alarm cues and disturbance cues can also play a role in alerti...
Simple Summary
Auditory function is an important sensory ability that contributes to the survival and reproduction of vertebrates. Studies have shown that turtles can hear and that sex-related differences exist in the auditory function of Trachemys scripta elegans. However, the associated gene expression characteristics are unknown. Therefore, we p...
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...
Chelonians are considered the least vocally active group of extant reptiles and known as “low-frequency specialists” with a hearing range of <1.0 kHz. As they are ectothermic organisms, most of their physiological and metabolic processes are affected by temperature, which may include the auditory system responses. To investigate the influence of te...
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...
Many animals rely on complex signals that target multiple senses to attract mates and repel rivals. These multimodal displays can however also attract unintended receivers, which can be an important driver of signal complexity. Despite being taxonomically widespread, we often lack insight into how multimodal signals evolve from unimodal signals and...
Geographical divergence in acoustic signals is often affected by multiple selective pressures. Environmental factors are expected to shape signals by adjusting for greater propagation efficiency. Nevertheless, such habitat‐driven hypotheses have not been well‐examined with multi‐signal and multi‐habitat types included simultaneously. In this study,...
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...
Many animals rely on complex sexual signals that target multiple senses to attract mates and repel rivals. These multimodal mating displays can however also attract unintended receivers, which can be an important driver of signal complexity. Despite being taxonomically widespread, we often lack insight into how multimodal signals evolve from unimod...
Human activities worldwide are increasingly releasing low-frequency noise into the environment. Anthropogenic noise imposes a novel stress for wild animals and has become an increasing global concern. Many animals have been found to mitigate noise disturbance by modifying their acoustic parameters, yet the calling behaviours of species that breed n...
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...
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...
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 no...
Ontogenetic development of hearing sensitivity has been verified in many groups of vertebrates, but not turtles. Turtles exhibit sexual dimorphism in hearing. To examine the development of hearing in female turtles, auditory brainstem responses (ABR) were compared by assessing the hearing-sensitivity bandwidth, ABR threshold, and latency of female...
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...
Hearing sensitivity is of general interest from the perspective of understanding the functionality and evolution of vertebrate auditory systems. Sexual dimorphism of auditory systems has been reported in several species of vertebrates, but little is known about this phenomenon in turtles. Some morphological characteristics, such as middle ear and t...
Developmental plasticity of hearing sensitivity (DPHS) has been verified in some groups of vertebrates. Turtles face a trade-off between terrestrial and aquatic hearing in different acoustic environments throughout ontogeny. However, how chelonian hearing sensitivity changes throughout ontogeny is still unclear. To verify DPHS in turtles, auditory...
In this study, using Illumina sequencing data, we assembled the complete mitogenome of Goniurosaurus zhoui, which consists of 16,803 base pairs, comprising 13 protein-coding genes, 2 ribosomal RNA genes, 21 tRNA genes, and non-coding regions (D-loop), and has an overall A + T content of 60.39%. Using three complete 16S rRNA gene and 13 partial sequ...
To date, only a single complete mitochondrial genome sequence has been reported for species in the genus Goniurosaurus. In this study, using Illumina sequencing data, we assembled the complete mitochondrial genome of Goniurosaurus bawanglingensis, which consists of 16,982 base pairs, comprising 13 protein-coding genes, 2 ribosomal RNA genes, 22 tRN...
The matched filter hypothesis proposes that the tuning of auditory sensitivity should match the spectral character of calls, suggesting that sender calls and receiver auditory systems have co-evolved. However, studies provide mixed evidence, and in some species, this match is imprecise. Here, we analyzed the acoustic characteristics of male calls a...
Mating patterns exhibit considerable intra- and interspecific variation. Sexual selection can lead to the occurrence of random and assortative mating in different populations of the same species. Thus, understanding variation in mating decisions is crucial to understanding variation in the direction of sexual selection. We investigated natural mati...
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...
The aim of this study was to assess the effects and reversibility of the synthetic estrogen compound, quinestrol, on the reproductive organs, steroid hormones, and drug-metabolizing enzymes CYP3A4 and CYP1A2 in liver and kidney over time after two quinestrol treatments in female Mongolian gerbils (Meriones unguiculatus). Female gerbils were treated...
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...
Mifepristone and quinestrol are effective drugs for controlling rodent fertility, but their inhibitory effectiveness during premating, early pregnancy, and late pregnancy is unknown. In this study, six groups of eight female Brandt’s voles (Lasiopodomys brandtii) were administered with mifepristone, quinestrol, or a control for three days during pr...
Body mass can affect almost all biological variables of animals. Parents with high body mass usually have large litter sizes. As a costly physiological process, reproduction is often accompanied by oxidative damage. The present study was designed to explore the effects of parental body mass on life history characteristics, reproductive output and o...