Publications by authors named "Heike Vester"

The knowledge of the vocal repertoire of pilot whales is very limited. In this paper, the vocal repertoire of long-finned pilot whales recorded during different encounters in the Vestfjord in northern Norway between November 2006 and August 2010 are described. Sounds were analysed using two different methods: (1) an observer-based audio-visual inspection of FFT-derived spectrograms, with which, besides a general variety of clicks, buzzes, nonharmonic sounds, and whistles, 129 different distinct call types and 25 subtypes were distinguished.

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Recordings of animal vocalization can lack information about sender and context. This is often the case in studies on marine mammals or in the increasing number of automated bioacoustics monitorings. Here, we develop a framework to estimate group specificity without specific sender information.

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Article Synopsis
  • - North Atlantic killer whales exhibit significant population differentiation based on genetic analysis using microsatellites and mitochondrial DNA, identifying three distinct populations influenced by various prey resources like herring and mackerel.
  • - Genetic differences were more pronounced between two allopatric populations compared to partially sympatric ones, indicating spatial clustering linked to resource availability and potential founding events for two of the populations.
  • - Phylogenetic analyses revealed low female migration and primarily male-mediated gene flow, suggesting that genetic differentiation can happen through specializing in different prey without physical barriers separating the populations.
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Conspicuous sonic click sounds were recorded in the presence of cod (Gadus morhua), together with either harp seals (Pagophilus groenlandicus), hooded seals (Cystophora cristata) or a human diver in a pool. Similar sounds were never recorded in the presence of salmon (Salmo salar) together with either seal species, or from either seal or fish species when kept separately in the pool. It is concluded that cod was the source of these sounds and that the clicks were produced only when cod were approached by a swimming predatorlike body.

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