Matthews Leanna P, Blades Brittany, Parks Susan E
Biology Department, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY, United States of America.
Oregon Coast Aquarium, Newport, OR, United States of America.
PeerJ. 2018 Mar 26;6:e4547. doi: 10.7717/peerj.4547. eCollection 2018.
During the breeding season, male harbor seals () make underwater acoustic displays using vocalizations known as roars. These roars have been shown to function in territory establishment in some breeding areas and have been hypothesized to be important for female choice, but the function of these sounds remains unresolved. This study consisted of a series of playback experiments in which captive female harbor seals were exposed to recordings of male roars to determine if females respond to recordings of male vocalizations and whether or not they respond differently to roars from categories with different acoustic characteristics. The categories included roars with characteristics of dominant males (longest duration, lowest frequency), subordinate males (shortest duration, highest frequency), combinations of call parameters from dominant and subordinate males (long duration, high frequency and short duration, low frequency), and control playbacks of water noise and water noise with tonal signals in the same frequency range as male signals. Results indicate that overall females have a significantly higher level of response to playbacks that imitate male vocalizations when compared to control playbacks of water noise. Specifically, there was a higher level of response to playbacks representing dominant male vocalization when compared to the control playbacks. For most individuals, there was a greater response to playbacks representing dominant male vocalizations compared to playbacks representing subordinate male vocalizations; however, there was no statistical difference between those two playback types. Additionally, there was no difference between the playbacks of call parameter combinations and the controls. Investigating female preference for male harbor seal vocalizations is a critical step in understanding the harbor seal mating system and further studies expanding on this captive study will help shed light on this important issue.
在繁殖季节,雄性斑海豹会发出被称为吼声的声音进行水下声学展示。这些吼声已被证明在一些繁殖区域的领地建立中发挥作用,并且据推测对雌性的选择很重要,但这些声音的功能仍未得到解决。本研究包括一系列回放实验,其中将圈养的雌性斑海豹暴露于雄性吼声的录音中,以确定雌性是否对雄性发声的录音有反应,以及它们对具有不同声学特征类别的吼声的反应是否不同。这些类别包括具有优势雄性特征的吼声(持续时间最长、频率最低)、从属雄性的吼声(持续时间最短、频率最高)、优势和从属雄性叫声参数的组合(长持续时间、高频和短持续时间、低频),以及水噪声和与雄性信号频率范围相同的带有音调信号的水噪声的对照回放。结果表明,总体而言,与水噪声的对照回放相比,雌性对模仿雄性发声的回放有明显更高的反应水平。具体来说,与对照回放相比,对代表优势雄性发声的回放有更高的反应水平。对于大多数个体,与代表从属雄性发声的回放相比,对代表优势雄性发声的回放有更大的反应;然而,这两种回放类型之间没有统计学差异。此外,叫声参数组合的回放与对照之间没有差异。研究雌性对雄性斑海豹发声的偏好是理解斑海豹交配系统的关键一步,基于这项圈养研究的进一步研究将有助于阐明这个重要问题。