Singing in a noisy ocean: vocal plasticity in male humpback whales

E. Girola, R. Dunlop, M. Noad
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

ABSTRACT The songs produced by male humpback whales are believed to be a reproductive display shared by all singers within the same population. Ocean noise can interfere with the transmission of acoustic signals such as humpback whale songs. However, humpback whales evolved in an environment characterised by variable levels of noise generated by natural sources. This study investigates whether singing males compensate for natural noise by changing the characteristics of their sounds. Songs were recorded off eastern Australia during periods of time when the soundscape was dominated by natural noise. Source level, peak frequency and duration were measured for 2,318 song units from 19 singers. Source levels were positively correlated with noise levels, while there was no correlation between the peak frequency or duration of the units and noise levels. Our study shows that male humpback whales increase the source level of their units in response to increasing natural noise, i.e. they have a Lombard response, but they do not modify their spectral or temporal characteristics. This suggests that the need to adhere to the shared repertoire prevents changes to distinctive features of song units, i.e. frequency and duration, however, vocal plasticity allows adjusting source levels to the environmental conditions.
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在嘈杂的海洋中唱歌:雄性座头鲸的声音可塑性
摘要雄性座头鲸的歌声被认为是同一种群中所有歌手的生殖展示。海洋噪音会干扰声学信号的传输,例如座头鲸的歌声。然而,座头鲸是在自然来源产生的噪音水平可变的环境中进化而来的。这项研究调查了唱歌的雄性是否通过改变声音的特征来补偿自然噪音。歌曲是在澳大利亚东部以自然噪音为主的时期录制的。测量了来自19位歌手的2318首歌曲单元的源电平、峰值频率和持续时间。源水平与噪声水平呈正相关,而单元的峰值频率或持续时间与噪声水平之间没有相关性。我们的研究表明,雄性座头鲸会随着自然噪音的增加而增加其单位的来源水平,即它们具有伦巴第响应,但不会改变其光谱或时间特征。这表明,坚持共享曲目的必要性阻止了歌曲单元的独特特征(即频率和持续时间)的变化,然而,人声的可塑性允许根据环境条件调整音源水平。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
25
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Bioacoustics primarily publishes high-quality original research papers and reviews on sound communication in birds, mammals, amphibians, reptiles, fish, insects and other invertebrates, including the following topics : -Communication and related behaviour- Sound production- Hearing- Ontogeny and learning- Bioacoustics in taxonomy and systematics- Impacts of noise- Bioacoustics in environmental monitoring- Identification techniques and applications- Recording and analysis- Equipment and techniques- Ultrasound and infrasound- Underwater sound- Bioacoustical sound structures, patterns, variation and repertoires
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