Singing whales generate high levels of particle motion : implications for acoustic communication and hearing?
Singing whales generate high levels of particle motion : implications for acoustic communication and hearing?
Date
2016-10
Authors
Mooney, T. Aran
Kaplan, Maxwell B.
Lammers, Marc O.
Kaplan, Maxwell B.
Lammers, Marc O.
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Keywords
Acoustic communication
Noise
Cetacean
Bioacoustics
Hearing
Soundscape
Noise
Cetacean
Bioacoustics
Hearing
Soundscape
Abstract
Acoustic signals are fundamental to animal communication and cetaceans are often considered
bioacoustic specialists. Nearly all studies of their acoustic communication focus on sound
pressure measurements, overlooking the particle motion components of their communication
signals. Here we characterize the levels of acoustic particle velocity (and pressure) of song
produced by humpback whales. We demonstrate that whales generate acoustic fields that include
significant particle velocity components that are detectable over relatively long distances
sufficient to play a role in acoustic communication. We show that these signals attenuate
predictably in a manner similar to pressure and that direct particle velocity measurements can
provide bearings to singing whales. Whales could potentially use such information to determine
the distance of signaling animals. Additionally, the vibratory nature of particle velocity may
stimulate bone conduction, a hearing modality similar to other low-frequency specialized
mammals, offering a parsimonious mechanism of acoustic energy transduction into the massive
ossicles of whale ears. With substantial concerns regarding the effects of increasing
anthropogenic ocean noise and major uncertainties surrounding mysticete hearing, these results
highlight both an unexplored avenue that may be available for whale acoustic communication
and the need to better understand the biological role of acoustic particle motion.
Description
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2016. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of The Royal Society for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Biology Letters 12 (2016): 20160381, doi:10.1098/rsbl.2016.0381.