Dear colleagues,

my co-authors and I are pleased to announce our new publication in the PeerJ, 
entitled "The biosonar of the boto: evidence of differences among species of 
river dolphins (Inia spp.) from the Amazon".

Melo JF, Amorim TOS, Paschoalini M, Andriolo A. 2021. The biosonar of the boto: 
evidence of differences among species of river dolphins (Inia spp.) from the 
Amazon. PeerJ 9:e11105 https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.11105

Abstract
Echolocation clicks can reflect the anatomy of the vocalizing animal, enabling 
the distinction of species. River dolphins from the family Iniidae are formally 
represented by one species and two subspecies (Inia geoffrensis geoffrensis and 
I. g. humboldtiana). Additionally, two other species have been proposed (I. 
boliviensis and I. araguaiaensis) regarding its level of restricted 
distribution and morph-genetics differences. For the Committee on Taxonomy of 
the Society for Marine Mammalogy, the specific status of the proposed species 
relies on further knowledge on morphology, ecology, and genetics. Given that 
species-specific status is required for conservation efforts, we described and 
compared the echolocation clicks of Inia spp., searching for specific 
differences on their vocalizations. The sounds were captured with a Cetacean 
Research ™ C54XRS (+3/−20 dB, −185 dB re: 1V/μPa) in Guaviare River (Orinoco 
basin), Madeira River (Madeira basin), Xingu River (Amazon Basin), and Araguaia 
River (Tocantins-Araguaia basin). We found significant differences in all 
analyzed parameters (peak frequency, 3 dB bandwidth, 10 dB bandwidth and 
inter-click interval) for all species and subspecies. Differences in acoustical 
parameters of clicks are mainly related to the animal’s internal morphology, 
thus this study may potentially support with information for the species-level 
classification mostly of I. araguaiaensis (the Araguaian boto). Classifying the 
Araguaian boto separately from I. geoffrensis has important implications for 
the species in terms of conservation status, since it is restricted to a highly 
impacted river system.

The paper is available in open access at the following link: 
https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.11105

Best wishes,
Jéssica Melo

​Jéssica Fernandes de Melo, MsC
Pesquisadora – CNPq (PCI-D)

GP Mamíferos Aquáticos Amazônicos

Instituto de Desenvolvimento Sustentável Mamirauá

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