Dear Colleagues, 
I am happy to announce the publication of a new paper in which we present a new 
promising low-cost and safe recordings acoustic tag to identify individual 
emitters of bottlenose dolphins under human care. 
It can be accessed and downloaded in open access on Frontiers in Marine 
Science: ( [ 
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2022.915168/full | Frontiers 
| Identification of individual bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) 
emitters using a cheap wearable acoustic tag (frontiersin.org) ] 

ABSTRACT 

Study of animal communication and its potential social role implies associating 
signals to an emitter. This has been a major limitation in the study of 
cetacean communication as they produce sounds underwater with no distinctive 
behavioral signs. Different techniques have been used to identify callers, but 
all proved to have ethical or practical limitations. Bio-logging technology has 
recently provided new hopes, but tags developed so far are costly and do not 
allow sufficiently reliable discrimination between calls made by the tagged 
individual and those made by the surrounding individuals. We propose a new 
device developed at reasonable cost while providing reliable recordings. We 
tested caller identification through recordings of vocal production of a group 
of captive bottlenose dolphins under controlled and spontaneous contexts. Our 
device proved to identify callers through visual examination of sonograms and 
quantitative measures of amplitudes, even if tagged emitters are 0.4 m apart 
(regardless of body orientations). Although this device is not able to identify 
emitters in an entire group when all individuals are not equipped, it enables 
efficient exclusion of individuals who were not the caller, suggesting that 
identification of a caller would be reliable if all the individuals were 
equipped. This is to our knowledge the first description of a promising 
low-cost safe recording device allowing individual identification of emitters 
for captive dolphins. With some improvements, this device could become an 
interesting tool to increase our knowledge of dolphin acoustic communication. 

Gallo, A., Thieffry, A., Boye, M., Monmasson, K., Hausberger, M., & Lemasson, 
A. (2022). Identification of individual bottlenose dolphins ( Tursiops 
truncatus ) emitters using a cheap wearable acoustic tag. Frontiers in Marine 
Science , 1599. 

Best regards, 
Alessandro Gallo 



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