Whistling is metabolically cheap for communicating bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus)

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Date
2019-12-03
Authors
Pedersen, Michael B.
Fahlman, Andreas
Borque-Espinosa, Alicia
Madsen, Peter T.
Jensen, Frants H.
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DOI
10.1242/jeb.212498
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Keywords
Respiratory physiology
Sound production
Acoustic communication
Underwater noise
Vocal modifications
Toothed whales
Abstract
Toothed whales depend on sound for communication and foraging, making them potentially vulnerable to acoustic masking from increasing anthropogenic noise. Masking effects may be ameliorated by higher amplitudes or rates of calling, but such acoustic compensation mechanisms may incur energetic costs if sound production is expensive. The costs of whistling in bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) have been reported to be much higher (20% of resting metabolic rate, RMR) than theoretical predictions (0.5–1% of RMR). Here, we address this dichotomy by measuring the change in the resting O2 consumption rate (V̇O2), a proxy for RMR, in three post-absorptive bottlenose dolphins during whistling and silent trials, concurrent with simultaneous measurement of acoustic output using a calibrated hydrophone array. The experimental protocol consisted of a 2-min baseline period to establish RMR, followed by a 2-min voluntary resting surface apnea, with or without whistling as cued by the trainers, and then a 5-min resting period to measure recovery costs. Daily fluctuations in V̇O2 were accounted for by subtracting the baseline RMR from the recovery costs to estimate the cost of apnea with and without whistles relative to RMR. Analysis of 52 sessions containing 1162 whistles showed that whistling did not increase metabolic cost (P>0.1, +4.2±6.9%) as compared with control trials (−0.5±5.9%; means±s.e.m.). Thus, we reject the hypothesis that whistling is costly for bottlenose dolphins, and conclude that vocal adjustments such as the Lombard response to noise do not represent large direct energetic costs for communicating toothed whales.
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Author Posting. © Company of Biologists, 2019. This article is posted here by permission of Company of Biologists for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Experimental Biology 223(1), (2019): jeb.212498, doi: 10.1242/jeb.212498.
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Pedersen, M. B., Fahlman, A., Borque-Espinosa, A., Madsen, P. T., & Jensen, F. H. (2019). Whistling is metabolically cheap for communicating bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus). The Journal of Experimental Biology, 223(1), jeb.212498.
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