Publication Cover
Bioacoustics
The International Journal of Animal Sound and its Recording
Volume 8, 1997 - Issue 3-4
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Original Articles

STRIDULATORY ORGAN AND ULTRASONIC EMISSION IN CERTAIN SPECIES OF PONERINE ANTS (GENUS: ECTATOMMA AND PACHYCONDYLA, HYMENOPTERA, FORMICIDAE)

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Pages 209-221 | Received 09 Sep 1996, Accepted 03 Jan 1997, Published online: 13 Apr 2012
 

ABSTRACT

Five species of neotropical Ponerinae ants, Ectatomma permagnum Forel, E. quadridens Fabr., E. ruidum Roger, E. tuberculatum Olivier and Pachycondyla apicalis Latreille, were studied. The genus Ectatomma, consisting of 14 species in the tropical forests of Central and South America, has been studied previously in relation to the stridulatory organ only. Stridulations were heard, in the four species considered in this paper, during artificial disturbance of individuals or of the whole colony; so the role of sound production during normal life is still uncertain. Pachycondyla apicalis, belonging to Central American forests, is occasionally present in cocoa and coffee plantations.

The recordings made under laboratory conditions revealed the emission of pulse trains with very clear pulses extending in frequency to more than 75 kHz. The sounds recorded from the workers of the genus Ectatomma appeared homogeneous in their acoustic structure. They were typically emitted in long sequences and were made of pulse-trains consisting of two subunits (disyllabic chirps) characterized by pulses with opposite phase, produced by the alternate movement of the simple plectrum against the pars stridens. In sounds recorded from workers of Pachycondyla we found sequences of monosyllabic chirps, made by single trains of pulses. Pictures and measurements on the stridulatory apparatus were made with a scanning electron microscope.

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