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Australian scientists decode whale sounds

November 9 2007 at 10:49 AM
CatherineB  (Premier Login Brocksopp)
Forum Owner

http://www.reuters.com/article/latestCrisis/idUSSYD59010


Australian scientists decode whale sounds
Wed Nov 7, 2007 8:57pm EST
By Tessa Dunlop

SYDNEY, Nov 8 (Reuters) - Australian scientists studying humpback whales
sounds say they have begun to decode the whale's mysterious communication
system, identifying male pick-up lines and motherly warnings.

Wops, thwops, grumbles and squeaks are part of the extensive whale
repertoire recorded by scientists from the University of Queensland
working on the Humpback Whale Acoustic Research Collaboration (HARC)
project.

Recording whale sounds over a three-year period, scientists discovered at
least 34 different types of whale calls, with data published in the
Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

"I was expecting to find maybe 10 different social vocalisations, but in
actual fact found 34. It's just such a wide, varied repertoire,"
University of Queensland researcher Rebecca Dunlop told Reuters.

The researchers studied migrating east humpback whales, as they travelled
up and down Australia's east coast, and recorded 660 sounds from 61
different groups.

Researchers attached audio transmitters to buoys near the whales and
monitored the whale interaction from the shore.

Many of the whale sounds could overlap in meaning, said Dunlop, but some
had clear meanings.

A purr by males appeared to signify the male was trying his luck to mate a
desirable female. High frequency cries and screams were associated with
disagreements, when males jostled to escort females during migration, she
said.

A wop sound was common when mothers were together with their young. "The
wop was probably one of the most common sounds I heard, probably
signifying a mum calf contact call," said Dunlop.

Dunlop stopped short of defining the whale communication as a language,
but said there were clear similarities with human interaction.

"Its quite fascinating that they're obviously marine mammals, they've been
separated from terrestrial mammals for a long, long, long time, but yet
still seem to be following the same basic communication system," she said.

Dunlop hopes further research on the subject will help reveal the effect
of boats and man-induced sonar on migrating whales. (Editing by Alex
Richardson)


 
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