Dear Colleagues,

We are pleased to share our recent publication in Animal Behaviour:

Wierucka K., Pitcher B. J., Harcourt R., Charrier I. (2018). Multimodal 
mother-offspring recognition: the relative importance of sensory cues in a 
colonial mammal. Animal Behaviour, 146, 135-142.

Abstract:
Animals often employ multiple sensory modalities for communication and 
recognition; however, the combination of sensory cues used by individuals in 
given contexts will vary. Although mother-offspring recognition has been widely 
investigated and is known to be a multimodal process in gregarious mammal 
species, there is a dearth of information about the interactions between 
various sensory cues. Here we show how acoustic, olfactory and visual cues are 
used in a synergistic way in Australian sea lion, Neophoca cinerea, 
mother-offspring recognition. We interpret the results using a cost-benefit 
perspective to disentangle the evolutionary pressures on each component of this 
communication system. Although olfactory cues can convey individual identity 
information it was their presence, not their congruency, that prompted female 
sniffs. We found that calls needed to be from the female's own pup for the 
identification process to be successful, with the information encoded in 
acoustic cues overriding that of olfactory cues. Despite each sensory cue 
accurately conveying identity information when presented in isolation, in a 
multimodal setting their importance, function or role may change and seems to 
be driven by the costs and benefits of obtaining information resulting from the 
constraints imposed by the active space of cues.

The article can be accessed at https://authors.elsevier.com/a/1Y6NnmjLmWZe.

Best wishes,

Kaja
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