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北美野牛母婴间的声学通讯。

Bison mother-offspring acoustic communication.

作者信息

Clarke Jennifer A

机构信息

Biology Department, University of La Verne, La Verne, CA 91750, United States.

出版信息

J Mammal. 2024 Aug 8;105(5):1182-1189. doi: 10.1093/jmammal/gyae076. eCollection 2024 Oct.

Abstract

Mother-offspring communication is especially crucial for social species in order to synchronize activities essential for early survival including nursing, resting, maintaining proximity during group movements between food or water sources, and locating one another if separated in a large social group. One of the most social ungulate species in North America is the American Bison (), formerly known as buffalo. Adult female bison associate with their young for over a year and communication between mother and offspring is likely essential for establishing and maintaining a bond upon which the life of a calf depends. One goal of this study was to quantify and compare the acoustic form of vocalizations of adult female, subadult, and calf bison and to determine how age classes differed in call structure. The other goal was to identify the contexts in which bison vocalized. Vocalizations of 101 bison (53 adult females, 15 subadults, 33 calves) in a semi-free-ranging herd in Montana were analyzed and found to be pulsatile sounds, unlike vocalizations of bison bulls or domestic cows and calves. Vocalizations of bison cows, subadults, and calves differed significantly in total duration, numbers of pulses, pulse duration, and pulse rate. Seven distinct call contexts were identified. The majority of calls were "moving-on calls" (39%), when a cow called and her calf ran to her side and the 2 moved on together, and "contact calls" (21%) when a cow called and her calf called back but neither changed their location. "Imprinting calls" and "nursing calls" were also identified. Mother-offspring acoustic communication in bison appears especially critical for coordinating movements. Understanding the role of acoustic communication in maintaining the bond between bison mothers and their offspring can contribute to the humane management and welfare of this iconic species.

摘要

母婴交流对于群居物种尤为关键,以便同步早期生存所必需的活动,包括哺乳、休息、在前往食物或水源地的群体移动过程中保持靠近,以及在大型群居群体中走散时相互定位。北美最具群居性的有蹄类动物之一是美洲野牛(),以前被称为水牛。成年雌性野牛与其幼崽相处一年多,母婴之间的交流对于建立和维持小牛生存所依赖的纽带可能至关重要。本研究的一个目标是量化并比较成年雌性、亚成年和小牛野牛发声的声学形式,并确定不同年龄组在叫声结构上的差异。另一个目标是确定野牛发声的情境。对蒙大拿州一个半放养牛群中101头野牛(53头成年雌性、15头亚成年、33头小牛)的发声进行了分析,发现其为脉冲式声音,这与野牛公牛或家养母牛及小牛的发声不同。野牛母牛、亚成年和小牛的发声在总时长、脉冲数量、脉冲时长和脉冲速率上有显著差异。确定了七种不同的叫声情境。大多数叫声是“继续前行叫声”(39%),即母牛呼叫,其幼崽跑到她身边,然后二者一起继续前行;以及“联系叫声”(21%),即母牛呼叫,其幼崽回应,但二者都不改变位置。还识别出了“印记叫声”和“哺乳叫声”。野牛的母婴声学交流对于协调行动似乎尤为关键。了解声学交流在维持野牛母亲与其后代之间纽带方面的作用,有助于对这一标志性物种进行人道管理和保障其福利。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/9528/11427542/dbb2ebef3041/gyae076_fig1.jpg

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