Abstract

Communication is fundamental for the survival of animal species as signals are involved in many social interactions (mate selection, parental care, collective behaviours). The acoustic channel is an important modality used by birds and mammals to reliably exchange information among individuals. In group-living species, the propagation of vocal signals is limited due to the density of individuals and the background noise. Vocal exchanges are, therefore, challenging. This study is the first investigation into the acoustic communication system of the Cape fur seal (CFS), one of the most colonial mammals with breeding colonies of hundreds of thousands of individuals. We described the acoustic features and social function of five in-air call types from data collected at two colonies. Intra-species variations in these vocalizations highlight a potential ability to convey information about the age and/or sex of the emitter. Using two classification methods, we found that the five call types have distinguishable frequency features and occupy distinct acoustic niches indicating acoustic partitioning in the repertoire. The CFS vocalizations appear to contain characteristics advantageous for discrimination among individuals, which could enhance social interactions in their noisy and confusing acoustic environment. This study provides a basis for our understanding of the CFS acoustic communication system.

Highlights

  • Communication is fundamental for the reproduction and survival of many animal species [1]

  • A total of 39 h (32 h from Pelican Point (PP) recorded over 59 days and 7 h from Cape Cross (CC) recorded over 5 days) were analysed

  • Audio-visual inspection of the spectrograms and the social context of their production, vocalizations were divided into five call types, with four recorded in both colonies: female attraction call (FAC), pup attraction call (PAC), bark and growl

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Summary

Introduction

Communication is fundamental for the reproduction and survival of many animal species [1]. The effectiveness of vocal exchanges is, limited by factors such as the density of individuals and environmental constraints such as high background noise which limits the propagation of acoustic signals [4,5,6]. This highlights the need for an adapted and efficient communication system allowing individuals to establish and maintain reliable interindividual communication exchanges. This is crucial for the fundamental biological processes of a species (such as mate selection, reproduction and parental care)

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