Dear colleagues,
I am pleased to announce a recent publication in the Open Journal of Animal 
Science:
Rose, N. (2025) The Common Bottlenose Dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) Song. Open 
Journal of Animal Sciences, 15, 1-29. https://doi.org/10.4236/ojas.2025.151001
Abstract:   A 1.5-hour recording of six (Gulf of Mexico) captive common 
bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) at Sea Life Park, Hawaii shows that: 
1) they have a song of a sequence of tonal (often slurred) notes. The evidence 
for their song comes from: a) their emitting songs that were complex (both 
tonally and rhythmically), b) their likely improvising (as inferred from their 
most complex songs not being repeated), c) songs based on a theme (used 
repeatedly), d) a bout of singing (at times) including social creativity, e) 
songs with a distinct beginning, middle and end section, and f) one song 
consisting of in part, a theme, 2) their songs are not sung in key (as 
determined from analysing the beginning tonal value of a note with 
spectral-frequency analysis), and 3) are sung in bouts, and 4) mostly with 
tonal-striated vocalizations (in the literature termed squawks and bray calls). 
Their apparent creativity (likely improvisations) and social creativity are of 
importance to how they evolved cognitively, to the study of song culture 
(between populations and delphinid species), understanding their (intra and 
inter-species) associations, and kinds of relationships, determining individual 
personalities, and perhaps will provide supporting evidence for their ability 
to reason. As inferred, they sing without being intentionally manipulative 
from: 1) their use of Gquic psychology [1] (as explained in this article), and 
2) as inferred from their likely having an ability to reason [1] [2] (as 
deduced from their behavioural ecology (their unique exceptional evolutionary 
freedom), including their comparatively peaceful composure between 
conspecifics, in line with the proof of The Peaceful Composure Theorem), 
suggesting (per The Peaceful Composure Theorem) they have an egalitarian-like 
society. Their interspecies (displaced) aggression towards smaller odontocete 
species is shown to be a function of jealousies that emerge from their stronger 
social bonds than other species, from their compassionate nature, and females 
and males not pairing up in long-term associations. Species with greater 
cultural freedom are shown to have a more complex song providing further 
evidence for species culture not crucial to survival. The conclusive evidence 
for species culture from my recent publications is of relevance to the 
scientific community’s acceptance of two new theories of evolution, and Gquic 
psychology. The loud burst-pulse sounds, chasing, charging and raking 
behaviours described in the literature could be a play behaviour, ought not be 
labelled as aggressive behaviours, as inferred from dog mock-fight play 
behaviour. In regard to future comparative behavioural ecology studies, 
aggressive animal behaviour should only be defined as an act of displacement 
(that is shown to commonly occur in the Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphin species 
(Tursiops aduncus)), or as acts of biting, and hitting.
 The paper is available in more readable pdf format: 
https://www.scirp.org/pdf/ojas2025151_11401490.pdf

    
 Nicholovich Rose.      research_specifics_...@yahoo.com 

_______________________________________________
MARMAM mailing list
MARMAM@lists.uvic.ca
https://lists.uvic.ca/mailman/listinfo/marmam

Reply via email to