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Vocal foragers and silent crowds: context-dependent vocal variation in Northeast Atlantic long-finned pilot whales.

Fleur VisserAnnebelle C M KokMachiel G OudejansLindesay A S Scott-HaywardStacy L DeRuiterAna C AlvesRicardo N AntunesSaana IsojunnoGraham J PierceHans SlabbekoornJef HuismanPatrick J O Miller
Published in: Behavioral ecology and sociobiology (2017)
Social toothed whales rely on vocalisations to find prey and interact with conspecifics. Species are often highly vocal and can have elaborate call repertoires. However, it often remains unclear how their repertoire use correlates to specific social and behavioural contexts, which is vital to understand toothed whale foraging strategies and sociality. Combining on-animal tag recordings of diving and acoustic behaviour with observations of social behaviour, we found that pilot whales produce more calls during foraging than during non-foraging periods. Moreover, highly inflected calls were closely associated to the periods around and during foraging dives. This indicates enhanced communication during foraging, which may, for example, enable relocation of conspecifics or sharing of information. Whales reduced their vocal activity (calling and echolocation) at increased levels of social cohesion, indicating that in certain behavioural contexts, closer association (i.e. more closely spaced) may release the need to stay in touch acoustically.
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