Startle together, shout in chorus: collective bursts of alarm calls in a social rodent, the Harting’s vole (Microtus hartingi)

Author:

Volodin Ilya A.1ORCID,Rutovskaya Marina V.2ORCID,Golenishchev Fedor N.3ORCID,Volodina Elena V.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Vertebrate Zoology, Faculty of Biology, Lomonosov Moscow State University, Vorobievy Gory 1/12, Moscow 119234, Russia

2. Department of Behaviour and Behavioural Ecology of Mammals, A.N. Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution, Russian Academy of Sciences, Leninsky Prospect 33, Moscow 119071, Russia

3. Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Universitetkaya Emb. 1, Saint Petersburg 199034, Russia

Abstract

Abstract We investigate the acoustic structure of alarm calls in a highly social rodent, the Harting’s vole (Microtus hartingi) and describe the phenomenon of collective shouting of bursts of alarm calls which could be produced in synchronized series. The alarm calls of Harting’s voles were recorded using an automatic device from 10 different family groups, containing from 4 to 15 potential callers, released to outdoor enclosures. Natural predators and humans served as call-eliciting stimuli. We reveal acoustic differences between urgent alarm calls, evoked by close-vicinity predators and identified from recordings by their calls and by rustle noise from the caller’s escape to burrow, and other alarm calls. We also reveal acoustic parameters between alarm calls produced in bursts and other alarm calls (produced in individual series or by a few non-synchronized callers). We discuss why the alarm calls of Harting’s voles are unusually high-frequency (about 17 kHz on average in the maximum fundamental frequency) among other vole species producing high-frequency alarms. Adaptive significance of producing the collective synchronized bursts of alarm calls by Harting’s voles remains unclear without direct observations of vocal vigilance in this species under natural conditions.

Publisher

Brill

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