This volume explains the key ideas, questions and methods involved in studying the hidden world of vibrational communication in animals. The authors dispel the notion that this form of communication is difficult to study and show how vibrational signaling is a key to social interactions in species that live in contact with a substrate, whether it be a grassy lawn, a rippling stream or a tropical forest canopy. This ancient and widespread form of social exchange is also remarkably understudied. A frontier in animal behavior, it offers unparalleled opportunities for discovery and for addressing general questions in communication and social evolution. In addition to reviews of advances made in the study of several animal taxa, this volume also explores topics?such as vibrational communication networks, the interaction of acoustic and vibrational communication, the history of the field, the evolution of signal production and reception and establishing a common vocabulary.
Part I. Studying vibrational communication Ideas, Concepts and History
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(1) Rex Cocroft, Matija Gogala, Peggy Hill, Andreas Wessel
Fostering research progress in a rapidly growing field
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(2) Peggy Hill
Stretching the paradigm or building anew? Development of a cohesive language for vibrational communication
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(3) Matija Gogala
Sound or vibration, an old question in insect communication
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(4) Andreas Wessel
Hildegard Str?bing a pioneer in vibrational communication research
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(5) Hildegard Str?bing
Sound production the crucial factor for mate finding in planthoppers (Homoptera Auchenorrhyncha) (Preliminary communication), 1958
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