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Frogs Adapts Call Frequency to Maximize Babes

BKize writes "Like a teenager turning his guitar amp up to 11, Nature magazine has an article on the discovery that a male Bornean frog tunes its mating call to its home tree cavity to maximize the sound volume, and thereby increase the odds it will attract a female. A lab experiment revealed the frog dynamically adjusts the frequency of the call if the acoustic properties of the cavity change."

6 of 15 comments (clear)

  1. hey, me to! by f64 · · Score: 3, Funny

    i've been trying for years to find the exact tuning and accenturation with which to say "hey baby, come on over here".

    no breakthrough as of yet; if any of you accousticly & socially inclined /.ers can give me a hint, i'd appreciate it.


    f64 : crack remarks while on crack

  2. So it's like... by Hard_Code · · Score: 4, Funny

    "Can you hear me now?!"

    /me hides in shame

    --

    It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
  3. I'll hate myself for posting this, but... by Tsar · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I thought the whole point of mating was to do it before you croak.

    All kidding aside, wouldn't it be interesting to put these frogs in a set of tuned pipes and let them find their pitch? Find a (humane) way to stimulate them to call on command, and you'd have the world's first amphibious pipe organ.

  4. And the difference between a tree frog... by floydigus · · Score: 2

    ...and a slashdotter?

    The slashdotter has less chance of getting kissed by a princess.

    --

    All things in moderation; including moderation

  5. Phil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Phil Lesh used to play different bass notes at the sound check, in order to find the resonant acoustic frequency of whatever concrete hockey-rink the Grateful Dead happened to be playing. He then hit the note during the concert to great effect. Don't know if he still does this or if it got him laid.

  6. Re:You'll hate me even more by Dolohov · · Score: 2
    But I don't think frogs croak underwater (doesn't that require air?), and the aucoustic properties of the pipes would change if you filled them up with water.

    I think he meant amphibian. Frogs croak in air. Pipes need to be filled with air. Just mist `em down every now and then, and you're fine.