Sea Mammal Research Unit, School of Biology, University of St Andrews, St Andrews, Fife KY16 8LB, UK.
Proc Biol Sci. 2012 Jul 7;279(1738):2539-45. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2011.2537. Epub 2012 Feb 29.
The bottlenose dolphin, Tursiops truncatus, is one of very few animals that, through vocal learning, can invent novel acoustic signals and copy whistles of conspecifics. Furthermore, receivers can extract identity information from the invented part of whistles. In captivity, dolphins use such signature whistles while separated from the rest of their group. However, little is known about how they use them at sea. If signature whistles are the main vehicle to transmit identity information, then dolphins should exchange these whistles in contexts where groups or individuals join. We used passive acoustic localization during focal boat follows to observe signature whistle use in the wild. We found that stereotypic whistle exchanges occurred primarily when groups of dolphins met and joined at sea. A sequence analysis verified that most of the whistles used during joins were signature whistles. Whistle matching or copying was not observed in any of the joins. The data show that signature whistle exchanges are a significant part of a greeting sequence that allows dolphins to identify conspecifics when encountering them in the wild.
宽吻海豚(Tursiops truncatus)是极少数能够通过声音学习创造新的声学信号并模仿同类叫声的动物之一。此外,接收者可以从叫声的发明部分提取身份信息。在圈养环境中,海豚在与群体其他成员分开时会使用这种标志性的哨声。然而,人们对它们在海上如何使用这些哨声知之甚少。如果标志性的哨声是传递身份信息的主要媒介,那么海豚应该在群体或个体加入的情况下交换这些哨声。我们在焦点船跟踪过程中使用被动声学定位来观察野生环境中的标志性哨声使用情况。我们发现,当海豚在海上相遇并加入时,主要会发生刻板的哨声交换。序列分析证实,在大多数加入的情况下使用的都是标志性哨声。在任何一次加入中都没有观察到哨声匹配或复制。这些数据表明,标志性哨声交换是问候序列的重要组成部分,当海豚在野外遇到同类时,可以通过这种方式识别它们。