Literature

Authorssort ascendingYearTitle
Zuk2015Roaming Romeos: male crickets evolving in silence show increased locomotor behaviours
Whattam, Bertram2011Effects of juvenile and adult condition on long-distance call components in the Jamaican field cricket, Gryllus assimilis
Webb, Roff1992The quantitative genetics of sound production in Gryllus firmus
Wagner, Hoback1999Nutritional effects on male calling behaviour in the variable field cricket
Honda-Sumi2005Difference in calling song of three field crickets of the genus Teleogryllus: the role in premating isolation
Spooner1968Pair-forming acoustic systems of phaneropterine katydids (Orthoptera, Tettigoniidae)
Simmons, Zuk1992Variability in call structure and pairing success of male field crickets, Gryllus bimaculatus: the effects of age, size and parasite load
Simmons1988The calling song of the field cricket, Gryllus bimaculatus (de geer): constraints on transmission and its role in intermale competition and female choice
Simmons2004Genotypic variation in calling song and female preferences of the field cricket Teleogryllus oceanicus
Sakaguchi, Gray2011Host song selection by an acoustically orienting parasitoid fly exploiting a multispecies assemblage of cricket hosts
Rebar2017When do acoustic cues matter? Perceived competition and reproductive plasticity over lifespan in a bushcricket
Orci, Petróczki, Barta2016Instantaneous song modification in response to fluctuating traffic noise in the tree cricket Oecanthus pellucens
Olzer, Zuk2018Obligate, but not facultative, satellite males prefer the same male sexual signal characteristics as females
Morris1971Aggression in male conocephaline grasshoppers (tettigoniidae)
Morris1980Calling display and mating behaviour of Copiphora rhinoceros Pictet (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae)
L.Minckley, D.Greenfield, K.Tourtellot1995Chorus structure in tarbush grasshoppers: inhibition, selective phonoresponse and signal competition
Latimer, Sippel1987Acoustic cues for female choice and male competition in Tettigonia cantans
Kuriwada2017Male–male courtship behaviour, not relatedness, affects the intensity of contest competition in the field cricket
Judge2011Do male field crickets, Gryllus pennsylvanicus, signal their age?
Haskell1958Stridulation and associated behaviour in certain orthoptera. 2. Stridulation of females and their behaviour with males
Gwynne1982Mate selection by female katydids (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae, Conocephalus nigropleurum)
Gray, Eckhardt2001Is cricket courtship song condition dependent?
Erregger, R. Hennig2018The ‘hot male’ hypothesis: do female crickets prefer males with increased body temperature in mate choice scenarios?
Erregger2018Anthropogenic calling sites boost the sound amplitude of advertisement calls produced by a tropical cricket
Crnokrak, Roff1995Fitness differences associated with calling behaviour in the two wing morphs of male sand crickets, Gryllus firmus
L. Botha, Jones, Hopkins2017Effects of lifetime exposure to artificial light at night on cricket ( Teleogryllus commodus ) courtship and mating behaviour
Boake1984Male displays and female preferences in the courtship of a gregarious cricket
Bentley1972Genetic control of the neuronal network generating cricket (Teleogryllus gryllus) song patterns
Balakrishnan, Pollack1996Recognition of courtship song in the field cricket,Teleogryllus oceanicus
Bailey, Stephen1984Auditory acuity in the orientation behaviour of the bushcricket Pachysagella australis walker (Orthoptera, Tettigoniidae, Saginae)
Bailey, Robinson1971Song as a possible isolating mechanism in the genus Homorocoryphus (Tettigonioidea, Orthoptera)
Bailey, Cunningham, Lebel1990Song power, spectral distribution and female phonotaxis in the bushcricket Requena verticalis (Tettigoniidae: Orthoptera): active female choice or passive attraction
Bailey, Hennig2017Divergent mechanisms of acoustic mate recognition between closely related field cricket species ( Teleogryllus spp.)
Anichini, Frommolt2018To compete or not to compete: bushcricket song plasticity reveals male body condition and rival distance
Scratchpads developed and conceived by (alphabetical): Ed Baker, Katherine Bouton Alice Heaton Dimitris Koureas, Laurence Livermore, Dave Roberts, Simon Rycroft, Ben Scott, Vince Smith