Scinax altae in Costa Rica
45
portance of examining and integrating these types of struc-
tural characteristics of advertisement calls, in addition to 
the traditional temporal and spectral characteristics.
e record of this acoustically prominent species (Sci-
nax altae) in the Pacic slopes of southern Costa Rica is 
highlighted due to the fact that this region has been his-
torically well sampled and explored. is new record joins 
recent records of two frogs, Pristimantis taeniatus (Bou-
lenger, 1912) (Arias et al. 2023) and Elachistocleis pearsei 
(Ruthven, 1914) (Vargas & Barrio-Amorós 2023) on the 
South Pacic versant of Costa Rica. Very little is known 
about the natural history and habitat use of these species 
in Costa Rica. It is necessary to evaluate whether these 
new records correspond to chance nds in unexplored 
microhabitats or if it is possible that recent expansion 
ranges explain their presence. e distribution ranges of 
these three species recently recorded for the Pacic slope 
of Costa Rica is limited due to big agricultural expansions 
(pineapple and oil palm). However, it seems possible that 
these species are dispersed via transportation of fruits or 
other agricultural items.
León (1969) and Duellman (1970) described the mat-
ing calls of S. altae and S. staueri as a series of short na-
sals notes “ah-ah-ah-ah”, which present a fundamental fre-
quency of about 106 Hz for S. staueri and around 112 
Hz for S. altae.
Currently, the fundamental frequency to describe the 
advertisement calls is little used, because it can be rather 
dicult to identify which one is the base frequency pro-
duced by the vocal chords, therefore, pinpointing the fun-
damental frequency of secondary importance (Köhler et 
al. 2017).
Köhler et al. (2017) and Emmrich et al. (2020) devel-
oped a set of parameters for the description of advertise-
ment calls. According to these authors, in general, the calls 
of these two species are better classied as a pulse repeti-
tion sound, since they consist of bursts of sound energy 
represented as several acoustic units.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
We thank Edgar Chinchilla for providing the rst no-
tice of the presence of the species in Buenos Aires; Luis 
Díaz Gamboa sent calls of Scinax staueri from Yucatan 
for comparison, and Gerardo Chaves “Cachí” also sent 
us calls recorded by Eberhard Meyer in Costa Rica. Our 
gratitude to Mauricio Rivera-Correa, for advice on the 
bioacoustic description of the frog calls, as well as to two 
anonymous reviewers for their useful comments. is 
work is beneted by the corresponding scientic collect-
ing permits (SINAC-SE- GAS-PI-R 59-2015).
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