Dear MARMAM community,

On behalf of the authors and co-authors, we are pleased to announce the 
publication of the following paper in Proceedings of the National Academy of 
Sciences:

Sayigh L.*, El Haddad N.*, Peter L. Tyack, Vincent M. Janik, Randall S. Wells, 
and Frants H. Jensen. (2023). Bottlenose dolphin mothers modify signature 
whistles in the presence of their own calves. Proceedings of the National 
Academy of Sciences, https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2300262120 
<https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2300262120>.

Abstract:
Human caregivers interacting with children typically modify their speech in 
ways that promote attention, bonding, and language acquisition. Although this 
“motherese,” or child-directed communication (CDC), occurs in a variety of 
human cultures, evidence among nonhuman species is very rare. We looked for its 
occurrence in a nonhuman mammalian species with long-term mother–offspring 
bonds that is capable of vocal production learning, the bottlenose dolphin 
(Tursiops truncatus). Dolphin signature whistles provide a unique opportunity 
to test for CDC in nonhuman animals, because we are able to quantify changes in 
the same vocalizations produced in the presence or absence of calves. We 
analyzed recordings made during brief catch-and-release events of wild 
bottlenose dolphins in waters near Sarasota Bay, Florida, United States, and 
found that females produced signature whistles with significantly higher 
maximum frequencies and wider frequency ranges when they were recorded with 
their own dependent calves vs. not with them. These differences align with the 
higher fundamental frequencies and wider pitch ranges seen in human CDC. Our 
results provide evidence in a nonhuman mammal for changes in the same 
vocalizations when produced in the presence vs. absence of offspring, and thus 
strongly support convergent evolution of motherese, or CDC, in bottlenose 
dolphins. CDC may function to enhance attention, bonding, and vocal learning in 
dolphin calves, as it does in human children. Our data add to the growing body 
of evidence that dolphins provide a powerful animal model for studying the 
evolution of vocal learning and language.

Please feel free to get in touch to receive a pdf copy.
Link to article: https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2300262120 
<https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2300262120>

Sincerely, 
Nicole El Haddad
c +39 366 155 6004 
w n.elhad...@campus.unimib.it <mailto:n.elhad...@campus.unimib.it> or 
nicole....@gmail.com <mailto:nicole....@gmail.com>

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