Roars, Rumbles, and Resonance: A Systematic Review and Meta‐Analysis of Crocodylian Acoustic Signals
Sonnie A. Flores, Ross G. Dwyer, Stuart Parsons, Dominique A. Potvin

TL;DR
This paper reviews crocodile-like reptiles' vocalizations, standardizing terminology and measurements to improve future research and conservation efforts.
Contribution
The study provides a systematic review and standardized framework for crocodylian acoustic signals, highlighting data gaps and suggesting future research directions.
Findings
The American alligator was the most studied species, with distress calls being the most common signal type.
Significant variation in measured parameters was found, with dominant frequency, call duration, and fundamental frequency being the most common.
The paper identifies data gaps, particularly in underwater acoustic signaling and species-specific repertoires.
Abstract
Crocodylians are highly vocal reptiles, possessing a complex acoustic signalling system including vocal and non‐vocal signals used for courtship, mating, mediating conflict, and providing maternal care. Despite this, research on crocodylian acoustic signalling remains infrequent, with methodologies and terminology varying widely across studies. Here, we systematically review the literature and standardise crocodylian acoustic signal descriptions, measurements, and terminology to establish a consistent foundation for future research. The compiled dataset included 22 publications, with 623 acoustic signalling observations and 53 distinct parameters measured across various species, life stages, and contexts. The American alligator ( Alligator mississippiensis ) was the most frequently studied species and distress calls the most commonly recorded signal type. Significant variation existed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPaleontology and Evolutionary Biology · Marine animal studies overview · Ichthyology and Marine Biology
