Watwood
Stephanie Lynn
Watwood
Stephanie Lynn
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ThesisWhistle use and whistle sharing by allied male bottlenose dolphins, Tursiops truncatus(Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, 2003-09) Watwood, Stephanie LynnMale dolphins form stable, long-term alliances comparable to long-term relationships formed by terrestrial species. The goal of this thesis was to determine the effect of the formation of these alliances on vocal development. Comparing whistles produced in isolation revealed that alliance partners have similar whistles, while non-partners do not. Whistle similarity seen in alliance partners mirrors group-specific vocal convergence in stable groups of birds and bats. Males produce more variable whistles than females, and females have more stable whistle repertoires. Unlike males, females do not maintain the strong, stable relationships seen in male alliances. Increased vocal plasticity in males may be related to modifying whistle production while forming alliances. Females produced whistles that were less similar to other females than to males. Females may rely on whistle distinctiveness for mother-offspring recognition, while males may rely on whistle convergence to maintain specific social bonds. The whistles produced by an isolated individual may not represent its complete repertoire. A hydrophone array was used to record whistles of free-swimming, socializing individuals to compare to the whistles produced by those animals in isolation. There was no significant difference in the whistle repertoires of restrained vs. free-swimming dolphins for over 60% of the animals, and most produced at least one whistle type in both contexts. Therefore, animals use similar whistles in isolated and free-swimming conditions. Recordings of different social groups were examined to test if signature whistles function as contact calls. An allied male produced signature whistles most often when separated from his partner and least often when with his partner. Signature whistles were also highly individually distinctive, and therefore well suited as contact calls, while variant whistles were not. Separations and reunions between alliance partners were examined to determine if whistles are used to maintain contact between preferred associates. Most whistles recorded from separated males were signature whistles. The timing of whistle production was correlated with the timing of the maximum partner separation and the initiation of a reunion. Few whistles were produced as the partners separated. Therefore, whistles may initiate reunions between partners. This thesis demonstrates that free-ranging male dolphins use signature whistles in the same way as females and captive dolphins.