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发声行为影响海豚的代谢率:对在嘈杂环境中交流的动物的启示

Vocal performance affects metabolic rate in dolphins: implications for animals communicating in noisy environments.

作者信息

Holt Marla M, Noren Dawn P, Dunkin Robin C, Williams Terrie M

机构信息

Conservation Biology Division, Northwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, 2725 Montlake Blvd. East, Seattle, WA 98112, USA

Conservation Biology Division, Northwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, 2725 Montlake Blvd. East, Seattle, WA 98112, USA.

出版信息

J Exp Biol. 2015 Jun;218(Pt 11):1647-54. doi: 10.1242/jeb.122424. Epub 2015 Apr 7.

Abstract

Many animals produce louder, longer or more repetitious vocalizations to compensate for increases in environmental noise. Biological costs of increased vocal effort in response to noise, including energetic costs, remain empirically undefined in many taxa, particularly in marine mammals that rely on sound for fundamental biological functions in increasingly noisy habitats. For this investigation, we tested the hypothesis that an increase in vocal effort would result in an energetic cost to the signaler by experimentally measuring oxygen consumption during rest and a 2 min vocal period in dolphins that were trained to vary vocal loudness across trials. Vocal effort was quantified as the total acoustic energy of sounds produced. Metabolic rates during the vocal period were, on average, 1.2 and 1.5 times resting metabolic rate (RMR) in dolphin A and B, respectively. As vocal effort increased, we found that there was a significant increase in metabolic rate over RMR during the 2 min following sound production in both dolphins, and in total oxygen consumption (metabolic cost of sound production plus recovery costs) in the dolphin that showed a wider range of vocal effort across trials. Increases in vocal effort, as a consequence of increases in vocal amplitude, repetition rate and/or duration, are consistent with behavioral responses to noise in free-ranging animals. Here, we empirically demonstrate for the first time in a marine mammal, that these vocal modifications can have an energetic impact at the individual level and, importantly, these data provide a mechanistic foundation for evaluating biological consequences of vocal modification in noise-polluted habitats.

摘要

许多动物会发出更大声、更长或更重复的叫声,以补偿环境噪音的增加。在许多分类群中,尤其是在日益嘈杂的栖息地中依靠声音进行基本生物功能的海洋哺乳动物中,因应对噪音而增加发声努力所带来的生物学成本,包括能量成本,在经验上仍未明确。在本研究中,我们通过实验测量经过训练在不同试验中改变发声响度的海豚在休息和2分钟发声期的耗氧量,来检验发声努力增加会给信号发出者带来能量成本这一假设。发声努力被量化为所发出声音的总声能。在发声期,海豚A和海豚B的代谢率平均分别是静息代谢率(RMR)的1.2倍和1.5倍。随着发声努力的增加,我们发现,在两只海豚发声后的2分钟内,相对于静息代谢率,代谢率都有显著增加,并且在试验中发声努力范围更广的那只海豚的总耗氧量(发声产生的代谢成本加上恢复成本)也增加了。由于发声幅度、重复率和/或持续时间的增加而导致的发声努力增加,与自由放养动物对噪音的行为反应是一致的。在此,我们首次在海洋哺乳动物中通过实验证明,这些发声改变会在个体层面产生能量影响,重要的是,这些数据为评估噪音污染栖息地中发声改变的生物学后果提供了一个机制基础。

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