Credit:
Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain
A
team of marine biologists, zoologists, and cetologists from Université
Paris-Saclay, Université d'Antananarivo and Ambodiforaha Sainte Marie has
learned more about the ways baby humpback whales and their mothers communicate.
In their study published in
the journal Proceedings of the Royal
Society B: Biological Sciences, the group attached camera-equipped,
multi-sensor tags to several of the whales and then analyzed the sounds they
emitted under different contexts, such as during feeding or play.
Prior research has shown that humpback whales use sounds for a wide variety of purposes, including communication with others of their kind, mating signals and sensory perception. Humpback whale vocalizations usually come as a series of repetitious sounds at varying frequencies, leading many in the field to refer to them as songs.
Video from the calf's perspective: The calf
surfaces to breathe, produces subtle, short low-frequency calls, and then
suckles. For optimal appreciation, headphones with good bass response are
recommended. Location: Sainte Marie, Madagascar. Year: 2022. Credit: Ratsim et
al.
For this new study, the research
team switched their attention from the vocalizations of adult whales
communicating with one another to calves communicating with their mothers.
The research team affixed devices
capable of recording both video and audio to eight calves living with their
mothers off the coast of Sainte Marie Island. They then analyzed the 33 hours
of recorded material back in their lab.
One of the first parts of their
analysis involved separating out the sounds made by the calves from all others,
including their mothers. They then studied voicings across multiple baby whales
during certain behaviors such as nursing, playing and simply sitting idle. This
allowed them to note patterns in the way the whales spoke to their mothers when
they wanted different things, or when they were simply attempting to express
themselves.
The researchers found that the
young whales tended to get noisy just before nursing in the morning—and such
periods of noise lasted the longest of all those they studied. They also noted
that such vocalizations tended to be low-frequency and also included what they
describe as snorts, barks, grunts and burps, which they suggest are likely
forms of begging to be fed.
The researchers studied 500 calls in all and noted that the calves were most quiet during downtimes, such as when traveling, and grew louder during times when they were allowed to play on the water's surface.
by Bob Yirka , Phys.org
Source: Baby humpback whale recordings reveal vocalizations directed to their mothers
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