The same theory that explains individual differences in human speech has
recently been applied to other members of the animal kingdom, including
dogs and deer. Now researchers are working to understand whether
individually distinctive vocal characteristics of North Atlantic right
whales could be used to identify and track individuals -- a potentially
useful tool for studying an endangered species that spends much of its
life hidden under the water.
The same theory that explains individual differences in human speech has recently been applied to other members of the animal kingdom, including dogs and deer. Now researchers from Syracuse University in New York are working to understand whether individually distinctive vocal characteristics of North Atlantic right whales could be used to identify and track individuals -- a potentially useful tool for studying an endangered species that spends much of its life hidden under the water.
In an initial study, the scientists were able to correctly
distinguish 13 different individual whales based on a combination of
vocal characteristics, including length of the calls and the fundamental
and harmonic frequencies. The team will present their results at the
169th meeting of the Acoustical Society of America, held May 18-22, 2015
in Pittsburgh.
North Atlantic right whales feed on tiny zooplankton in shallow
waters off the east coast of the United States and Canada. For centuries
whalers hunted the animals, and even after achieving some measures of
protection in the 1930s, the population has remained critically
endangered. Current estimates put the number of North Atlantic right
whales at around 450 individuals.
Right whales make about a half-dozen different types of calls. The
Syracuse researchers looked specifically at the characteristics of the
"upcall," a vocalization that lasts about 1-2 seconds and rises in
frequency from around 100 Hz to 400 Hz, at the low end of frequencies
audible to human ears. The upcall is the most commonly produced call
among all ages and sexes of right whales. The whales likely use the
calls to announce their presence and "touch base" with other whales.
Jessica McCordic, a masters student in the biology department at
Syracuse University, along with her advisor, biology professor Susan
Parks, analyzed more than a decade of archived acoustic data gathered
from suction cup sensors attached to the backs of individual right
whales in Cape Cod Bay, off Massachusetts; the Bay of Fundy, in Canada;
and along the southeast coast of the United States.
Based on the characteristics that distinguish human voices, McCordic
initially thought the emphasized harmonic frequencies of the upcalls,
called formants, would best distinguish individual whales.
"What I found was that there actually wasn't much difference in the
formants, but one of the variables that came out as most important in
discriminating the individuals was the duration of the call," McCordic
said.
In the end, the team found that analyzing a combination of variables,
including the formant, the duration of the calls, and the rate of the
fundamental frequency change, could distinguish between the upcalls of
the 13 individual whales identified in the archival data set.
"The analysis classified the whales well above chance levels, so that was really exciting," McCordic said.
McCordic said the next step in the research is to see whether the
same analytic approach can tell individual right whales apart in the
wild using stationary hydrophones installed across their habitat range
-- a monitoring technique that could yield valuable data to help protect
the endangered species.
This story is taken from Science Daily
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