?Greetings,

I'm pleased to announce a new open access paper, which presents an alternative 
theoretical framework for understanding the vocal behavior of humpback whales.

Mercado, Eduardo, III (2018) The Sonar Model for Humpback Whale Song Revised
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY   Volume: 9     Article Number: 1156   ?

https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01156/full

Abstract

Why do humpback whales sing? This paper considers the hypothesis that humpback 
whales may use song for long range sonar. Given the vocal and social behavior 
of humpback whales, in several cases it is not apparent how they monitor the 
movements of distant whales or prey concentrations. Unless distant animals 
produce sounds, humpback whales are unlikely to be aware of their presence or 
actions. Some field observations are strongly suggestive of the use of song as 
sonar. Humpback whales sometimes stop singing and then rapidly approach distant 
whales in cases where sound production by those whales is not apparent, and 
singers sometimes alternately sing and swim while attempting to intercept 
another whale that is swimming evasively. In the evolutionary development of 
modern cetaceans, perceptual mechanisms have shifted from reliance on visual 
scanning to the active generation and monitoring of echoes. It is hypothesized 
that as the size and distance of relevant events increased, humpback whales 
developed adaptive specializations for long-distance echolocation. Differences 
between use of songs by humpback whales and use of sonar by other echolocating 
species are discussed, as are similarities between bat echolocation and singing 
by humpback whales. Singing humpback whales are known to emit sounds intense 
enough to generate echoes at long ranges, and to flexibly control the timing 
and qualities of produced sounds. The major problem for the hypothesis is the 
lack of recordings of echoes from other whales arriving at singers immediately 
before they initiate actions related to those whales. An earlier model of 
echoic processing by singing humpback whales is here revised to incorporate 
recent discoveries. According to the revised model, both direct echoes from 
targets and modulations in song-generated reverberation can provide singers 
with information that can help them make decisions about future actions related 
to mating, traveling, and foraging. The model identifies acoustic and 
structural features produced by singing humpback whales that may facilitate a 
singer's ability to interpret changes in echoic scenes and suggests that 
interactive signal coordination by singing whales may help them to avoid mutual 
interference. Specific, testable predictions of the model are presented.?

Cheers,

Eduardo Mercado III
Professor
Department of Psychology; Ecology, Evolution, & Behavior Program
University at Buffalo, SUNY
Buffalo, NY

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