AI Article Synopsis

  • Different marine mammal populations have unique acoustic signals that can indicate their isolation and are influenced by environmental, genetic, or social factors.
  • Researchers identified two distinct types of short-finned pilot whales in the Pacific—Naisa and Shiho types—based on their genetic and physical traits.
  • An analysis of vocalizations from both types revealed significant differences in their sound characteristics, suggesting they may be separate sub-species; classification efforts reached 74% accuracy, indicating clear acoustic divergence.

Article Abstract

Divergence in acoustic signals used by different populations of marine mammals can be caused by a variety of environmental, hereditary, or social factors, and can indicate isolation between those populations. Two types of genetically and morphologically distinct short-finned pilot whales, called the Naisa- and Shiho-types when first described off Japan, have been identified in the Pacific Ocean. Acoustic differentiation between these types would support their designation as sub-species or species, and improve the understanding of their distribution in areas where genetic samples are difficult to obtain. Calls from two regions representing the two types were analyzed using 24 recordings from Hawai'i (Naisa-type) and 12 recordings from the eastern Pacific Ocean (Shiho-type). Calls from the two types were significantly differentiated in median start frequency, frequency range, and duration, and were significantly differentiated in the cumulative distribution of start frequency, frequency range, and duration. Gaussian mixture models were used to classify calls from the two different regions with 74% accuracy, which was significantly greater than chance. The results of these analyses indicate that the two types are acoustically distinct, which supports the hypothesis that the two types may be separate sub-species.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/1.4974858DOI Listing

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