Dear MARMAM Community,

My co-authors and I are happy to announce our recent open-access
publication in the Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. In this
paper, we analyse the stability and variability of signature whistles of
wild free-swimming Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins (*Tursiops aduncus*).
Please see the details and abstract below. The publication is available
here: https://doi.org/10.1121/10.0036433

Ekaterina Ovsyanikova, Barry McGovern, Elizabeth Hawkins, Léonie
Huijser, Rebecca
Dunlop, Michael Noad; Balance between stability and variability in
bottlenose dolphin signature whistles offers potential for additional
information. *J. Acoust. Soc. Am.* 1 April 2025; 157 (4): 2982–2993.
https://doi.org/10.1121/10.0036433

Abstract:

Bottlenose dolphins produce individually distinctive signature whistles
(SWs) to broadcast identity. Stability of the SW frequency contour is
essential to preserve identity information; however, SWs could carry
additional information which requires variability. We used acoustic
recordings from provisioned free-swimming Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins
at Moreton Island (Mulgumpin), Australia, collected in 2002 and 2017–2018,
to assess the long-term (15-year) stability in SWs, and if variability of
acoustic parameters increases with whistle complexity. Stability was
assessed by analyzing basic contour parameters (minimum and maximum
frequency, duration, etc.) and visually. We quantified SW variability using
two developed variability metrics. Complexity was defined using four
developed metrics, and its effect on variability was tested. Our results
demonstrated that SW contours remain highly stable over time, but minimum
frequency decreased by 8.8%. SWs also showed different degrees of
variability between individuals. Variability appeared to be higher in males
than in females, possibly indicating differences in SW use in different
social contexts. Furthermore, SWs with a greater level of frequency
modulation varied more than less modulated whistles. We propose that SWs
possess sufficient variation in their frequency contour to contain
additional information, possibly related to social and behavioral context,
while still maintaining their identity function.

Kind regards,

Ekaterina Ovsyanikova

*Dr Ekaterina (Katya) Ovsyanikova *

(she/her)
MSc, PhD

Casual Academic



School of the Environment

The University of Queensland

Brisbane Qld 4072 Australia

*T* +61 7 334 64557* E *e.ovsyanik...@uq.edu.au



*  UQ* *Mental Health* *Champion* – *Supporting the mental health of the UQ
community**.*

*  U**Q* *A**L**L**Y *Supporting the diversity of sexuality and gender
identity at UQ.

*UQ DIAN **— **Advocating for disability inclusion at UQ*

*I acknowledge the Turrbal and Yaggera people, Traditional Owners and
Custodians of the lands on which I live and work, and pay my respects
to Elders, past, present and emerging.*
_______________________________________________
MARMAM mailing list
MARMAM@lists.uvic.ca
https://lists.uvic.ca/mailman/listinfo/marmam

Reply via email to