00329nas a2200121 4500008004100000245002500041210002500066100001800091700001900109700001500128700001700143856004700160 2014 eng d00aNHM Sound Collection0 aNHM Sound Collection1 aBaker, Edward1 aPrice, Ben, W.1 aBroom, Sam1 aSmith, Leroy uhttp://bio.acousti.ca/nontaxonomy/term/58800555nas a2200169 4500008004100000245008400041210006900125260001200194300001100206490000900217100001800226700001900244700002000263700001300283700001800296856007100314 2015 eng d00aBioAcoustica: a free and open repository and analysis platform for bioacoustics0 aBioAcoustica a free and open repository and analysis platform fo c08/2015 abav0540 v20151 aBaker, Edward1 aPrice, Ben, W.1 aRycroft, S., D.1 aHill, J.1 aSmith, V., S. uhttp://database.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/doi/10.1093/database/bav05402567nas a2200169 4500008004100000022001400041245015200055210006900207300001000276490000600286520197800292100001802270700001902288700001902307700002302326856004802349 2015 eng d a1314-283600aGlobal Cicada Sound Collection I: Recordings from South Africa and Malawi by B. W. Price & M. H. Villet and harvesting of BioAcoustica data by GBIF0 aGlobal Cicada Sound Collection I Recordings from South Africa an ae57920 v33 a
Background
Sound collections for singing insects provide important repositories that underpin existing research (e.g. Price et al. 2007 at http://bio.acousti.ca/node/11801; Price et al. 2010) and make bioacoustic collections available for future work, including insect communication (Ordish 1992), systematics (e.g. David et al. 2003), and automated identification (Bennett et al. 2015). The BioAcoustica platform (Baker et al. 2015) is both a repository and analysis platform for bioacoustic collections: allowing collections to be available in perpetuity, and also facilitating complex analyses using the BioVeL cloud infrastructure (Vicario et al. 2011). The Global Cicada Sound Collection is a project to make recordings of the world's cicadas (Hemiptera: Cicadidae) available using open licences to maximise their potential for study and reuse. This first component of the Global Cicada Sound Collection comprises recordings made between 2006 and 2008 of Cicadidae in South Africa and Malawi.
New Information
This collection of sounds includes 219 recordings of 133 voucher specimens, comprising 42 taxa (25 identified to species, all identified to genus) from South Africa and Malawi. The recordings have been used to underpin work on the species limits of cicadas in southern Africa, including Price et al. 2007 and Price et al. 2010. The specimens are deposited in the Albany Museum, Grahamstown, South Africa (AMGS).
The harvesting of acoustic data as occurrence records by GBIF has been implemented by the Scratchpads Team at the Natural History Museum, London. This link increases the value of individual recordings and the BioAcoustica platform within the global infrastructure of biodiversity informatics by making specimen/occurence records from BioAcoustica available to a wider audience, and allowing their integration with other occurence datasets that also contribute to GBIF.
1 aBaker, Edward1 aPrice, Ben, W.1 aRycroft, Simon1 aVillet, Martin, H. uhttp://bdj.pensoft.net/articles.php?id=579202128nas a2200217 4500008004100000245018900041210006900230300001400299490000700313520129700320653001301617653001901630653002301649653002101672653001501693653001501708100001901723700001901742700002301761856012601784 2007 eng d00aPatterns and processes underlying evolutionary significant units in the Platypleura stridula L. species complex (Hemiptera: Cicadidae) in the Cape Floristic Region, South Africa0 aPatterns and processes underlying evolutionary significant units a2574-25880 v163 aCicadas have been shown to be useful organisms for examining the effects of distribution, plant association and geographical barriers on gene flow between populations. The cicadas of the Platypleura stridula species complex are restricted to the biologically diverse Cape Floristic Region (CFR) of South Africa. They are thus an excellent study group for eluci- dating the mechanisms by which hemipteran diversity is generated and maintained in the CFR. Phylogeographical analysis of this species complex using mitochondrial DNA Cytochrome Oxidase I (COI) and ribosomal 16S sequence data, coupled with preliminary morphological and acoustic data, resolves six clades, each of which has specific host-plant associations and distinct geographical ranges. The phylogeographical structure implies simultaneous or near-simultaneous radiation events, coupled with shifts in host-plant associations. When calibrated using published COI and 16S substitution rates typical for related insects, these lineages date back to the late Pliocene – early Pleistocene, coincident with vegetation change, altered drainage patterns and accelerated erosion in response to neotectonic crustal uplift and cyclic Pleistocene climate change, and glaciation-associated changes in climate and sea level.
10aendemism10aphylogeography10aplant associations10asea-level change10aspeciation10avicariance1 aPrice, Ben, W.1 aBarker, N., P.1 aVillet, Martin, H. uhttps://bio.acousti.ca/ja/content/patterns-and-processes-underlying-evolutionary-significant-units-platypleura-stridula-l