Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego, 9500 Gilman Drive, La Jolla, California 92093-0205, USA.
J Acoust Soc Am. 2012 Apr;131(4):EL295-301. doi: 10.1121/1.3690963.
Killer whales in the North Pacific, similar to Atlantic populations, produce high-frequency modulated signals, based on acoustic recordings from ship-based hydrophone arrays and autonomous recorders at multiple locations. The median peak frequency of these signals ranged from 19.6-36.1 kHz and median duration ranged from 50-163 ms. Source levels were 185-193 dB peak-to-peak re: 1 μPa at 1 m. These uniform, repetitive, down-swept signals are similar to bat echolocation signals and possibly could have echolocation functionality. A large geographic range of occurrence suggests that different killer whale ecotypes may utilize these signals.
北太平洋的虎鲸与大西洋种群相似,会产生高频调制信号,这是基于来自船舶水听器阵和多个地点的自主记录器的声学记录得出的。这些信号的中值峰值频率范围为 19.6-36.1 kHz,中值持续时间范围为 50-163 ms。声源级为 185-193 dB 峰峰值,相对于 1 m 处的 1 μPa。这些均匀、重复、向下扫的信号类似于蝙蝠的回声定位信号,可能具有回声定位功能。大范围的地理分布表明,不同的虎鲸生态型可能会利用这些信号。