DEVELOPMENT AND SOCIAL FUNCTIONS OF SIGNATURE WHISTLES IN BOTTLENOSE DOLPHINS TURSIOPS TRUNCATUS
- 1 January 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Bioacoustics
- Vol. 8 (1-2) , 21-46
- https://doi.org/10.1080/09524622.1997.9753352
Abstract
Bottlenose dolphins Tursiops truncatus produce individually distinctive signature whistles. Dolphins recognize the signature whistles of animals with which they share a social bond. Signature whistles develop within the first few months of life and are stable for a lifetime. Vocal learning appears to play a role in the development of signature whistles in bottlenose dolphins. The signature whistles of most female dolphins and about half of male dolphins differ from those of their mothers. Some dolphin calves born in captivity develop a signature whistle that matches either man-made whistles or those of an unrelated dolphin. Dolphins retain the ability as adults to imitate the whistles of animals with which they share strong individual-specific social relationships, bonds which may change throughout their lifetime. The exceptional imitative abilities of dolphin infants and the retention of this ability in adults may be related to the maintenance of changing individual specific social relationships. Individual recognition by the voice may differ in marine vs terrestrial mammals. Diving marine mammals may not be able to rely upon involuntary voice cues for individual recognition, but rather may require vocal learning to maintain a stable signature as their vocal tract changes shape with increasing pressure during a dive.Keywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Signature whistle variations in a bottlenosed dolphin, Tursiops truncatusBehavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 1994
- A quantitative measure of similarity for tursiops truncatus signature whistlesThe Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1993
- Review of the Signature-Whistle Hypothesis for the Atlantic Bottlenose DolphinPublished by Elsevier ,1990
- Signalling systems for individual recognition: an information theory approachAnimal Behaviour, 1989
- A Comparative Model of Infant CryPublished by Springer Nature ,1985
- Of Human Bonding: Newborns Prefer Their Mothers' VoicesScience, 1980
- The Whistle of the Atlantic Bottlenosed Dolphin (Tursiops truncatus)—OntogenyPublished by Springer Nature ,1979
- Perception of the speech code.Psychological Review, 1967
- Distress Call of the Bottlenose Dolphin: Stimuli and Evoked Behavioral ResponsesScience, 1963
- Über die biologische Bedeutung der „zweckdienlichen” Anwendung erlernter Laute bei VögelnZeitschrift Fur Tierpsychologie, 1962