Dear colleagues,

Our paper on 'Vocal plasticity in harbour seal pups' has recently been 
published in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological 
Sciences.

The paper is available on the journal webpage: 
https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2020.0456 .

If the link above does not work and you would like to obtain a PDF, do not 
hesitate to contact me at: andrea.ravign...@mpi.nl .

Kind regards,
Andrea

Vocal plasticity can occur in response to environmental and biological factors, 
including conspecifics' vocalizations and noise. Pinnipeds are one of the few 
mammalian groups capable of vocal learning, and are therefore relevant to 
understanding the evolution of vocal plasticity in humans and other animals. 
Here, we investigate the vocal plasticity of harbour seals (Phoca vitulina), a 
species with vocal learning abilities observed in adulthood but not puppyhood. 
To evaluate early mammalian vocal development, we tested 1–3 weeks-old seal 
pups. We tailored noise playbacks to this species and age to induce seal pups 
to shift their fundamental frequency (f0), rather than adapt call amplitude or 
temporal characteristics. We exposed individual pups to low- and high-intensity 
bandpass-filtered noise, which spanned—and masked—their typical range of f0; 
simultaneously, we recorded pups' spontaneous calls. Unlike most mammals, pups 
modified their vocalizations by lowering their f0 in response to increased 
noise. This modulation was precise and adapted to the particular experimental 
manipulation of the noise condition. In addition, higher levels of noise 
induced less dispersion around the mean f0, suggesting that pups may have 
actively focused their phonatory efforts to target lower frequencies. Noise did 
not seem to affect call amplitude. However, one seal showed two characteristics 
of the Lombard effect known for human speech in noise: significant increase in 
call amplitude and flattening of spectral tilt. Our relatively low noise levels 
may have favoured f0 modulation while inhibiting amplitude adjustments. This 
lowering of f0 is unusual, as most animals commonly display no such f0 shift. 
Our data represent a relatively rare case in mammalian neonates, and have 
implications for the evolution of vocal plasticity and vocal learning across 
species, including humans.


Andrea Ravignani
Group Leader, Comparative Bioacoustics, 
Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics


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