The call of a
Jurassic-era cricket was simple, pure and capable of traveling long
distances in the night, said scientists who reconstructed the creature's
love song from a 165 million year old fossil.
British scientists based their work out Monday on an extremely well preserved fossil of a katydid, or bush cricket, from China named Archaboilus musicus. The cricket lived in an era when dinosaurs roamed the earth.
The detailed wings, measuring
about 72 centimeters (three-quarters of an inch) long, allowed
scientists to recreate for the first time the features that would have
produced sound when rubbed together.
The result is "possibly the most
ancient known musical song documented to date," said the study which
appears in the US journal the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The ancient katydid's call should be imagined against a busy backdrop
of waterfalls, wind, the sound of water coursing through streams and
other amphibians and insects serenading would-be mates, the study
authors said.
"This Jurassic bush cricket...
helps us learn a little more about the ambiance of a world long gone,"
said co-author Fernando Montealegre-Zapata of the University of Bristol.
A simple call may have been the creature's best shot at attracting a mate in the nighttime forest, said co-author Daniel Robert, an expert in the biomechanics of singing and hearing in insects at the University of Bristol.
"Singing loud and clear advertises
the presence, location and quality of the singer, a message that
females choose to respond to -- or not," he said.
"Using a single tone, the male's call carries further and better, and therefore is likely to serenade more females."
However, the long-extinct katydid
may have been alerting predators to his location, too. Some 100 million
years later, insects began developing the ability to make sounds at
frequencies their enemies, like bats, could not hear.
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