Acoustics of Sound Production and of Hearing in the Bladder Cicada Cystosoma Saundersii (Westwood)
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Fletcher, Neville H.
Hill, K. G.
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The Company of Biologists
Abstract
The male cicada of the species Cystosoma saundersii has a grossly enlarged,
hollow abdomen and emits a loud calling song with a fundamental
frequency of about 800 Hz. At the song frequency, its hearing is nondirectional.
The female of C. saundersii lacks sound producing organs, has no
enlargement of the abdomen, but possesses an abdominal air sac and has
well developed directional hearing at the frequency of the species' song.
Physical mechanisms are proposed that explain these observations in
semi-quantitative detail using the standard method of electrical network
analogues. The abdomen in the male, with its enclosed air, is found to act as
a system resonant at the song frequency, thus contributing a large gain in
radiated sound intensity. Coupling between this resonator and the auditory
tympana accounts for the observed hearing sensitivity in the male, but
destroys directionality. In the female, the abdominal cavity acts in association
with the two auditory tympana as part of a phase shift network which results
in appreciable directionality of hearing at the unusually low frequency of
the male song.
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Journal of Experimental Biology
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