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鲸类发声的系统发育综述及其与社会性的关系。

Phylogenetic review of tonal sound production in whales in relation to sociality.

作者信息

May-Collado Laura J, Agnarsson Ingi, Wartzok Douglas

机构信息

Florida International University, Department of Biological Sciences, 11200 SW 8th Street, Miami, FL 33199, USA.

出版信息

BMC Evol Biol. 2007 Aug 10;7:136. doi: 10.1186/1471-2148-7-136.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

It is widely held that in toothed whales, high frequency tonal sounds called 'whistles' evolved in association with 'sociality' because in delphinids they are used in a social context. Recently, whistles were hypothesized to be an evolutionary innovation of social dolphins (the 'dolphin hypothesis'). However, both 'whistles' and 'sociality' are broad concepts each representing a conglomerate of characters. Many non-delphinids, whether solitary or social, produce tonal sounds that share most of the acoustic characteristics of delphinid whistles. Furthermore, hypotheses of character correlation are best tested in a phylogenetic context, which has hitherto not been done. Here we summarize data from over 300 studies on cetacean tonal sounds and social structure and phylogenetically test existing hypotheses on their co-evolution.

RESULTS

Whistles are 'complex' tonal sounds of toothed whales that demark a more inclusive clade than the social dolphins. Whistles are also used by some riverine species that live in simple societies, and have been lost twice within the social delphinoids, all observations that are inconsistent with the dolphin hypothesis as stated. However, cetacean tonal sounds and sociality are intertwined: (1) increased tonal sound modulation significantly correlates with group size and social structure; (2) changes in tonal sound complexity are significantly concentrated on social branches. Also, duration and minimum frequency correlate as do group size and mean minimum frequency.

CONCLUSION

Studying the evolutionary correlation of broad concepts, rather than that of their component characters, is fraught with difficulty, while limits of available data restrict the detail in which component character correlations can be analyzed in this case. Our results support the hypothesis that sociality influences the evolution of tonal sound complexity. The level of social and whistle complexity are correlated, suggesting that complex tonal sounds play an important role in social communication. Minimum frequency is higher in species with large groups, and correlates negatively with duration, which may reflect the increased distances over which non-social species communicate. Our findings are generally stable across a range of alternative phylogenies. Our study points to key species where future studies would be particularly valuable for enriching our understanding of the interplay of acoustic communication and sociality.

摘要

背景

人们普遍认为,在齿鲸中,被称为“哨声”的高频音调声音是与“社会性”相关联进化而来的,因为在海豚科动物中,它们被用于社交场合。最近,有人提出哨声是群居海豚的一种进化创新(“海豚假说”)。然而,“哨声”和“社会性”都是宽泛的概念,各自代表了一系列特征的集合。许多非海豚科动物,无论独居还是群居,都会发出具有海豚科哨声大部分声学特征的音调声音。此外,性状相关性的假设最好在系统发育背景下进行检验,而迄今为止尚未这样做。在此,我们总结了300多项关于鲸类音调声音和社会结构的研究数据,并在系统发育上检验了关于它们共同进化的现有假设。

结果

哨声是齿鲸发出的“复杂”音调声音,它界定了一个比群居海豚更具包容性的进化枝。一些生活在简单社会中的河栖物种也会使用哨声,并且在群居的海豚类动物中哨声已经两次消失,所有这些观察结果都与所述的海豚假说不一致。然而,鲸类的音调声音和社会性是相互交织的:(1)音调声音调制的增加与群体大小和社会结构显著相关;(2)音调声音复杂性的变化显著集中在社会性分支上。此外,持续时间和最低频率相关,群体大小和平均最低频率也相关。

结论

研究宽泛概念的进化相关性,而不是其组成性状的相关性,充满困难,而现有数据的局限性限制了在这种情况下对组成性状相关性进行分析的详细程度。我们的结果支持社会性影响音调声音复杂性进化的假设。社会复杂性和哨声复杂性的水平相关,这表明复杂的音调声音在社会交流中起重要作用。大群体物种的最低频率更高,并且与持续时间呈负相关,这可能反映了非群居物种交流距离的增加。我们的研究结果在一系列替代系统发育中总体上是稳定的。我们的研究指出了一些关键物种,未来对这些物种的研究对于丰富我们对声学通讯和社会性相互作用的理解将特别有价值。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/2b42/2000896/6bc27f2b3b4e/1471-2148-7-136-1.jpg

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