1. Echolocation click parameters and biosonar behaviour of the dwarf sperm whale ( Kogia sima ).
- Author
-
Malinka CE, Tønnesen P, Dunn CA, Claridge DE, Gridley T, Elwen SH, and Teglberg Madsen P
- Subjects
- Acoustics, Animals, Ecosystem, Sound Spectrography, Vocalization, Animal, Whales, Echolocation
- Abstract
Dwarf sperm whales ( Kogia sima ) are small toothed whales that produce narrow-band high-frequency (NBHF) echolocation clicks. Such NBHF clicks, subject to high levels of acoustic absorption, are usually produced by small, shallow-diving odontocetes, such as porpoises, in keeping with their short-range echolocation and fast click rates. Here, we sought to address the problem of how the little-studied and deep-diving Kogia can hunt with NBHF clicks in the deep sea. Specifically, we tested the hypotheses that Kogia produce NBHF clicks with longer inter-click intervals (ICIs), higher directionality and higher source levels (SLs) compared with other NBHF species. We did this by deploying an autonomous deep-water vertical hydrophone array in the Bahamas, where no other NBHF species are present, and by taking opportunistic recordings of a close-range Kogia sima in a South African harbour. Parameters from on-axis clicks ( n =46) in the deep revealed very narrow-band clicks (root mean squared bandwidth, BW
RMS , of 3±1 kHz), with SLs of up to 197 dB re. 1 µPa peak-to-peak (μPapp ) at 1 m, and a half-power beamwidth of 8.8 deg. Their ICIs (mode of 245 ms) were much longer than those of porpoises (<100 ms), suggesting an inspection range that is longer than detection ranges of single prey, perhaps to facilitate auditory streaming of a complex echo scene. On-axis clicks in the shallow harbour ( n =870) had ICIs and SLs in keeping with source parameters of other NBHF cetaceans. Thus, in the deep, dwarf sperm whales use a directional, but short-range echolocation system with moderate SLs, suggesting a reliable mesopelagic prey habitat., Competing Interests: Competing interestsThe authors declare no competing or financial interests., (© 2021. Published by The Company of Biologists Ltd.)- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF