AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers collected 529 whistles from Indo-Pacific humpback dolphins in Zhanjiang, China, using autonomous acoustic recorders, focusing on tonal variations.
  • The analyzed whistles showed fundamental frequencies between 1785-21,675 Hz and durations from 30-1973 ms, with six tonal types identified, the most common being the constant type (32.51%).
  • Significant differences in whistle parameters were noted compared to studies in Malaysia and Sanniang Bay, indicating possible geographic isolation among dolphin populations due to environmental variations.

Article Abstract

Whistles emitted by Indo-Pacific humpback dolphins in Zhanjiang waters, China, were collected by using autonomous acoustic recorders. A total of 529 whistles with clear contours and signal-to-noise ratio higher than 10 dB were extracted for analysis. The fundamental frequencies and durations of analyzed whistles were in ranges of 1785-21 675 Hz and 30-1973 ms, respectively. Six tonal types were identified: constant, downsweep, upsweep, concave, convex, and sine whistles. Constant type was the most dominant tonal type, accounting for 32.51% of all whistles, followed by sine type, accounting for 19.66% of all whistles. This paper examined 17 whistle parameters, which showed significant differences among the six tonal types. Whistles without inflections, gaps, and stairs accounted for 62.6%, 80.6%, and 68.6% of all whistles, respectively. Significant intraspecific differences in all duration and frequency parameters of dolphin whistles were found between this study and the study in Malaysia. Except for start frequency, maximum frequency and the number of harmonics, all whistle parameters showed significant differences between this study and the study conducted in Sanniang Bay, China. The intraspecific differences in vocalizations for this species may be related to macro-geographic and/or environmental variations among waters, suggesting a potential geographic isolation among populations of Indo-Pacific humpback dolphins.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/1.5110304DOI Listing

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