Curé Charlotte, Isojunno Saana, I Vester Heike, Visser Fleur, Oudejans Machiel, Biassoni Nicoletta, Massenet Mathilde, Barluet de Beauchesne Lucie, J Wensveen Paul, Sivle Lise D, Tyack Peter L, Miller Patrick J O
Cerema - Ifsttar, UMRAE, 67035, Strasbourg, France.
Sea Mammal Research Unit, University of St. Andrews, St. Andrews, Fife, KY16 8LB, UK.
Anim Cogn. 2019 Sep;22(5):863-882. doi: 10.1007/s10071-019-01282-1. Epub 2019 Jun 22.
Killer whales (KW) may be predators or competitors of other cetaceans. Since their foraging behavior and acoustics differ among populations ('ecotypes'), we hypothesized that other cetaceans can eavesdrop on KW sounds and adjust their behavior according to the KW ecotype. We performed playback experiments on long-finned pilot whales (Globicephala melas) in Norway using familiar fish-eating KW sounds (fKW) simulating a sympatric population that might compete for foraging areas, unfamiliar mammal-eating KW sounds (mKW) simulating a potential predator threat, and two control sounds. We assessed behavioral responses using animal-borne multi-sensor tags and surface visual observations. Pilot whales barely changed behavior to a broadband noise (CTRL-), whereas they were attracted and exhibited spyhops to fKW, mKW, and to a repeated-tonal upsweep signal (CTRL+). Whales never stopped nor started feeding in response to fKW, whereas they reduced or stopped foraging to mKW and CTRL+. Moreover, pilot whales joined other subgroups in response to fKW and CTRL+, whereas they tightened individual spacing within group and reduced time at surface in response to mKW. Typical active intimidation behavior displayed to fKW might be an antipredator strategy to a known low-risk ecotype or alternatively a way of securing the habitat exploited by a heterospecific sympatric population. Cessation of feeding and more cohesive approach to mKW playbacks might reflect an antipredator behavior towards an unknown KW ecotype of potentially higher risk. We conclude that pilot whales are able to acoustically discriminate between familiar and unfamiliar KW ecotypes, enabling them to adjust their behavior according to the perceived disturbance type.
虎鲸(KW)可能是其他鲸类的捕食者或竞争者。由于它们的觅食行为和声学特征在不同种群(“生态型”)之间存在差异,我们推测其他鲸类可以偷听虎鲸的声音,并根据虎鲸的生态型调整自身行为。我们在挪威对长肢领航鲸(Globicephala melas)进行了回放实验,使用熟悉的以鱼为食的虎鲸声音(fKW)模拟可能竞争觅食区域的同域种群,不熟悉的以哺乳动物为食的虎鲸声音(mKW)模拟潜在的捕食者威胁,以及两种控制声音。我们使用动物携带的多传感器标签和水面视觉观察来评估行为反应。领航鲸对宽带噪声(CTRL-)几乎没有改变行为,而它们被fKW、mKW和重复音调上升信号(CTRL+)吸引并表现出跃身击浪。鲸鱼对fKW从未停止或开始进食,而它们对mKW和CTRL+则减少或停止觅食。此外,领航鲸对fKW和CTRL+的反应是加入其他亚组,而它们对mKW的反应是收紧群体内个体间距并减少在水面的时间。对fKW表现出的典型主动恐吓行为可能是对已知低风险生态型的反捕食策略,或者是确保被异域同域种群利用的栖息地的一种方式。停止进食以及对mKW回放采取更紧密的方式可能反映了对潜在更高风险的未知虎鲸生态型的反捕食行为。我们得出结论,领航鲸能够通过声学区分熟悉和不熟悉的虎鲸生态型,使它们能够根据感知到的干扰类型调整自身行为。