Dear all

We are pleased to announce our new publication:

King, S.L., Harley, H.E., and Janik, V.M. 2014. The role of signature whistle 
matching in bottlenose dolphins, Tursiops truncatus. Animal Behaviour. 96: 
79-86. doi: 10.1016/j.anbehav.2014.07.019

Abstract:

The addressing of individuals with learned signals is inherent to human social 
interactions. It allows individuals to solicit the attention of a particular 
social companion or to direct information towards an intended recipient. The 
ability to address individual conspecifics with learned signals is not limited 
to humans, however. In songbirds, the selective addressing of individuals is 
facilitated by song type matching but is very much a signal of aggressive 
intent. The matching of learned signals is also observed in bottlenose 
dolphins, which will match one another's highly individualized signature 
whistle. Copying in dolphins occurs between close associates, which suggests 
that it is an affiliative signal. It could, however, also serve to manage 
aggression. We investigated the valence of signature whistle matching by 
performing interactive playback experiments. We waited until an animal produced 
its signature whistle and then either played back a synthetic version of its 
own whistle (match) or a different signature whistle (control). A total of 110 
playback experiments were conducted with seven different animals from two 
managed groups of dolphins. The responses to the playback treatments were 
significantly different. Animals produced a consistent vocal response to being 
vocally matched, by returning the match, with no associated signal of 
aggression and did not respond to control playbacks in the same way. There was 
also an optimum time interval (<1 s) in which a match was most successful in 
eliciting a vocal response. Our results show that signature whistle matching is 
an affiliative signal that allows bottlenose dolphins to address social 
companions. Furthermore, these matching exchanges are driven by temporal 
associations, which appear to be essential in allowing animals to direct 
signals to particular individuals in large communication networks.

You can access the paper here 
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/00033472 

or alternatively you can email me directly for a copy (sl...@st-andrews.ac.uk)

best wishes

Stephanie

Dr. Stephanie L. King
Scottish Oceans Institute
University of St Andrews
East Sands
St Andrews
Scotland
KY16 8LB


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