Article Synopsis

  • Acoustic communication is vital for behaviors like parental care and mate attraction across various vertebrate species, but its evolutionary history is not well understood.
  • The study introduces vocal recordings and behavioral data from 53 species across major vertebrate groups, revealing acoustic abilities in some species that were thought to be non-vocal.
  • Phylogenetic analysis of 1800 vertebrate species indicates that acoustic communication is a homologous trait that likely dates back to the last common ancestor of choanate vertebrates, around 407 million years ago.

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Article Abstract

Acoustic communication, broadly distributed along the vertebrate phylogeny, plays a fundamental role in parental care, mate attraction and various other behaviours. Despite its importance, comparatively less is known about the evolutionary roots of acoustic communication. Phylogenetic comparative analyses can provide insights into the deep time evolutionary origin of acoustic communication, but they are often plagued by missing data from key species. Here we present evidence for 53 species of four major clades (turtles, tuatara, caecilian and lungfish) in the form of vocal recordings and contextual behavioural information accompanying sound production. This and a broad literature-based dataset evidence acoustic abilities in several groups previously considered non-vocal. Critically, phylogenetic analyses encompassing 1800 species of choanate vertebrates reconstructs acoustic communication as a homologous trait, and suggests that it is at least as old as the last common ancestor of all choanate vertebrates, that lived approx. 407 million years before present.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9596459PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-33741-8DOI Listing

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