麻豆淫院


It started with a squeak: Moonlight serenade helps lemurs pick mates of the right species

It started with a squeak: Moonlight serenade helps lemurs pick mates of the right species
Micocebus murinus on the lookout for a mate. Credit: Tiho Hannover

Lonely hearts columns testify that finding a partner can be hard enough, but at least most human beings can be fairly certain that when we do we have got one of the right species. Things aren鈥檛 so simple for all animals. Some Malagasy mouse lemurs are so similar that picking a mate of the right species, especially at night time in a tropical forest, might seem like a matter of pot luck. However, new research in BioMed Central鈥檚 journal BMC Biology has shown that our desperately cute distant cousins use vocalisations to pick up a partner of the right species.

Until recently, grey, golden brown, and Goodman鈥檚 mouse lemurs were all thought to be the same species. But genetic testing revealed that they are, in fact, three distinct, species so similar that they cannot be told apart by their appearance鈥攕o called cryptic species.

鈥淎 fundamental problem for cryptic species that live in the same area and habitat is the coordination of reproduction and discrimination between potential mates of the same species and remarkably similar individuals of other species鈥 say Pia Braune and colleagues from the Institute of Zoology, University of Veterinary Medicine, Hannover University.

Males of these nocturnal species use advertising calls to let females know that they are looking for love. The researchers recorded advertising calls from the three species and then played them back to grey mouse lemurs, noting what response, if any, they made. 鈥淕rey mouse lemurs reacted more to calls from other grey mouse lemurs than to those of either other species鈥, say the researchers. Furthermore, the grey mouse lemurs seemed to ignore the calls of golden brown mouse lemurs, which live in the same area and habitat to them, but show some interest in the calls of Goodman鈥檚 mouse lemur, which they would never normally meet. 鈥淭he importance of vocalisation in attracting mates is well known for frogs and birds鈥, explain the authors, 鈥渂ut this is the first evidence for species-specific call divergence in the communication of cryptic primate species with overlapping ranges.鈥

The lemurs鈥 moonlight serenades help to ensure that individuals of one species don鈥檛 waste time trying to mate with those of another, which would produce either no offspring or infertile hybrids. Indeed, the possibility of grey and golden-brown mouse lemurs encountering each other might explain the difference in calls and responses, according to Braune: 鈥渙ur data support the evolutionary hypothesis that species cohesiveness has led to divergence in signalling and recognition to avoid costly hybridisation.鈥

Source: BioMed Central

Citation: It started with a squeak: Moonlight serenade helps lemurs pick mates of the right species (2008, May 7) retrieved 4 May 2025 from /news/2008-05-moonlight-serenade-lemurs-species.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

New drone imagery reveals 97% of coral dead at a Lizard Island reef after last summer's mass bleaching

0 shares

Feedback to editors