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<document ID-DOI="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4761856" ID-GBIF-Dataset="b39773d2-f5ab-46f1-a8e5-dc7f64a9fca6" ID-GBIF-Taxon="182069536" ID-ISSN="1854-0392" ID-Zenodo-Dep="4761856" checkinTime="1620933390634" checkinUser="felipe" docAuthor="Sandberg, John B. &amp; Stewart, Kenneth W." docDate="2006" docId="DE1AD619FFD2F56ECAD979F3FD8A0D8A" docLanguage="en" docName="Illiesia.2.1.1-14.pdf" docOrigin="Illiesia 2 (1)" docStyle="DocumentStyle:1DEF1196F206C1C297CF0540A5C6768F.1:Illesia.2005-2008.journal_article" docStyleId="1DEF1196F206C1C297CF0540A5C6768F" docStyleName="Illesia.2005-2008.journal_article" docStyleVersion="1" docTitle="Isoperla rougensis" docType="treatment" docVersion="5" lastPageNumber="6" masterDocId="2223AE61FFD7F56BCA3A7910FFDC0E14" masterDocTitle="Continued Studies Of Vibrational Communication (Drumming) Of North American Plecoptera" masterLastPageNumber="14" masterPageNumber="1" pageId="5" pageNumber="6" updateTime="1634711404251" updateUser="ExternalLinkService" zenodo-license-document="CC-BY-4.0">
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<mods:title>Continued Studies Of Vibrational Communication (Drumming) Of North American Plecoptera</mods:title>
</mods:titleInfo>
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<mods:roleTerm>Author</mods:roleTerm>
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<mods:namePart>Sandberg, John B.</mods:namePart>
<mods:affiliation>&amp; Kenneth W. Stewart &amp; E-mail: jbs 001 @ unt. edu</mods:affiliation>
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<mods:roleTerm>Author</mods:roleTerm>
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<mods:namePart>Stewart, Kenneth W.</mods:namePart>
<mods:affiliation>Department of Biological Sciences, University of North Texas, Denton, TX 76203 &amp; E-mail: stewart @ unt. edu</mods:affiliation>
<mods:nameIdentifier type="email">stewart@unt.edu</mods:nameIdentifier>
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<mods:title>Illiesia</mods:title>
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<mods:date>2006</mods:date>
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<mods:number>2006-03-08</mods:number>
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<mods:number>2</mods:number>
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<mods:number>1</mods:number>
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<mods:end>14</mods:end>
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<mods:identifier type="DOI">http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4758579</mods:identifier>
<mods:identifier type="GBIF-Dataset">b39773d2-f5ab-46f1-a8e5-dc7f64a9fca6</mods:identifier>
<mods:identifier type="ISSN">1854-0392</mods:identifier>
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<treatment ID-DOI="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4761856" ID-GBIF-Taxon="182069536" ID-Zenodo-Dep="4761856" LSID="urn:lsid:plazi:treatment:DE1AD619FFD2F56ECAD979F3FD8A0D8A" httpUri="http://treatment.plazi.org/id/DE1AD619FFD2F56ECAD979F3FD8A0D8A" lastPageNumber="6" pageId="5" pageNumber="6">
<subSubSection box="[227,432,227,251]" pageId="5" pageNumber="6" type="nomenclature">
<paragraph blockId="5.[189,775,227,2062]" box="[227,432,227,251]" pageId="5" pageNumber="6">
<taxonomicName box="[227,426,227,251]" class="Insecta" family="Perlodidae" genus="Isoperla" higherTaxonomySource="CoL" kingdom="Animalia" order="Plecoptera" pageId="5" pageNumber="6" phylum="Arthropoda" rank="species" species="rougensis">
<emphasis box="[227,426,227,251]" italics="true" pageId="5" pageNumber="6">Isoperla rougensis</emphasis>
</taxonomicName>
.
</paragraph>
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<subSubSection pageId="5" pageNumber="6" type="discussion">
<paragraph blockId="5.[189,775,227,2062]" pageId="5" pageNumber="6">
One hundred twenty-eight and 111 signals were obtained from one, 1-day old male and female, respectively, at room temperature and normal incandescent light near a window. The male and the female produced 2-way duets either with the female answer following the call (N=78) or with interspersed answer beats during the males 3
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(N=1), 5
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(N=5) or 6
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(N=27) beat intervals. The male called with signals of 7 mode beats (6.9 ± 0.3); with intervals of 37.2 ± 3.2 ms (
<figureCitation box="[558,662,546,571]" captionStart="Figs" captionStartId="4.[189,241,1650,1674]" captionTargetBox="[391,1235,288,1498]" captionTargetId="figure-37@4.[391,1235,288,1498]" captionTargetPageId="4" captionText="Figs. 16. 1. Soliperla campanula drumming. Bar = 100-msec, total duration (TD)= 257-msec; 2. Isoperla muir drumming. (A) Male call, TD = 482-msec, (B) 2-way duet, TD = 960-msec. Bars = 500-msec.; 3. Isoperla rainera drumming. (A) Male call, TD = 1172-msec, (B) 2-way duet, female answer to computer playback of male call, TD = 2150-msec. Bars = 500-msec; 4. Isoperla rougensis drumming. (A) 2-way duet with female interspersed answer, (B) Split-channel view reveals previously hidden female first answer beats, TD = 574-msec. Bars = 500-msec; 5. Isoperla tilasqua drumming: 2-way duet with female interspersed answer, TD = 849-msec. Bar = 500 msec; 6. Pteronarcys scotti drumming: 2-way duet with female interspersed answer, TD = 4725-msec. Bar = 1000-msec." figureDoi="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4758585" httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/4758585/files/figure.png" pageId="5" pageNumber="6">Fig. 3 B</figureCitation>
,
<tableCitation box="[674,759,546,571]" captionStart="Table 1" captionStartId="2.[321,386,1149,1173]" captionTargetBox="[338,1908,201,993]" captionText="Table 1 New drumming descriptions of six Plecoptera species. Number of signals and individuals, numbers of beats per signal and total average beat intervals are provided for male calls and female answers. Exchange intervals are the intervals between male calls and female answers." httpUri="http://table.plazi.org/id/02CC3787FFD5F569CB7B7D6DFDAC0AC8" pageId="5" pageNumber="6" tableUuid="02CC3787FFD5F569CB7B7D6DFDAC0AC8">Table 1</tableCitation>
). The males average individual intervals gradually increased from 31.6 ms (i1) to 39.5 (i5), the last interval decreased to 38.9 ms (N=117) (
<tableCitation box="[669,762,653,677]" captionStart="Table 2" captionStartId="3.[177,242,1026,1050]" captionTargetBox="[192,2028,416,904]" captionTargetPageId="3" captionText="Table 2. Average individual male call intervals for six Plecoptera species. Underlined intervals indicate slight changes in general patterns of increasing ( I ) , decreasing (D), or both (I-D or D-I)." pageId="5" pageNumber="6">Table 2</tableCitation>
). Mode and mean number of beats per female answer signal were 7 and 6.5 ± 1.7; mean beat interval was 40.8 ± 7.2 ms for sequenced and overlapped duets. The
<specimenCount box="[462,482,794,819]" pageId="5" pageNumber="6" type="male"></specimenCount>
-
<specimenCount box="[491,511,794,819]" pageId="5" pageNumber="6" type="female"></specimenCount>
exchange interval was 27.9 ± 27.5 ms. A split-channel view (
<figureCitation box="[673,762,831,855]" captionStart="Figs" captionStartId="4.[189,241,1650,1674]" captionTargetBox="[391,1235,288,1498]" captionTargetId="figure-37@4.[391,1235,288,1498]" captionTargetPageId="4" captionText="Figs. 16. 1. Soliperla campanula drumming. Bar = 100-msec, total duration (TD)= 257-msec; 2. Isoperla muir drumming. (A) Male call, TD = 482-msec, (B) 2-way duet, TD = 960-msec. Bars = 500-msec.; 3. Isoperla rainera drumming. (A) Male call, TD = 1172-msec, (B) 2-way duet, female answer to computer playback of male call, TD = 2150-msec. Bars = 500-msec; 4. Isoperla rougensis drumming. (A) 2-way duet with female interspersed answer, (B) Split-channel view reveals previously hidden female first answer beats, TD = 574-msec. Bars = 500-msec; 5. Isoperla tilasqua drumming: 2-way duet with female interspersed answer, TD = 849-msec. Bar = 500 msec; 6. Pteronarcys scotti drumming: 2-way duet with female interspersed answer, TD = 4725-msec. Bar = 1000-msec." figureDoi="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4758585" httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/4758585/files/figure.png" pageId="5" pageNumber="6">Fig. 3B</figureCitation>
), revealed overlapped and interspersed female beats during the 5
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and 6
<superScript attach="left" box="[420,435,902,916]" fontSize="6" pageId="5" pageNumber="6">th</superScript>
call intervals.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
</treatment>
</document>