How does a fur seal mother recognize the voice of her pup? An experimental study of Arctocephalus tropicalis

Author:

Charrier Isabelle12,Mathevon Nicolas13,Jouventin Pierre2

Affiliation:

1. Laboratoire de Biologie Animale, Université Jean Monnet, 42023 Saint-Etienne cedex 2, France,

2. C.E.F.E. C.N.R.S., UPR 9056, Montpellier, France and

3. NAMC C.N.R.S., UMR 8620, Université Paris XI, Orsay, France

Abstract

SUMMARY In the subantarctic fur seal Arctocephalus tropicalis, mothers leave their pups during the rearing period to make long and frequent feeding trips to sea. When a female returns from the ocean, she has to find her pup among several hundred others. Taking into account both spectral and temporal domains, we investigated the individual vocal signature occurring in the ‘female attraction call’ used by pups to attract their mother. We calculated the intra- and inter-individual variability for each measured acoustic cue to isolate those likely to contain information about individual identity. We then tested these cues in playback experiments. Our results show that a female pays particular attention to the lower part of the signal spectrum, the fundamental frequency accompanied by its first two harmonics being sufficient to elicit reliable recognition. The spectral energy distribution is also important for the recognition process. Of the temporal features, frequency modulation appears to be a key component for individual recognition, whereas amplitude modulation is not implicated in the identification of the pup’s voice by its mother. We discuss these results with respect to the constraints imposed on fur seals by a colonial way of life.

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Insect Science,Molecular Biology,Animal Science and Zoology,Aquatic Science,Physiology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference54 articles.

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3. Aubin, T. and Jouventin, P. (1998). Cocktail-party effect in king penguin colonies. Proc. R. Soc. Lond. B265, 1665–1673.

4. Aubin, T. and Jouventin, P. (2001). How to vocally identify kin in a crowd: the penguin model. Adv. Study Behav.31, 243–277.

5. Beeman, K. (1996). Digital signal analysis, editing and synthesis. In Animal Acoustic Communication (ed. S. L. Hopp, M. J. Owren and C. S. Evans), pp. 59–104. Berlin: Springer.

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