Dear colleagues,

The following article was recently published online: 

Lammers, M.O. and Castellote, M. (2009). "The beluga whale produces two pulses 
to form its sonar signal" Biology Letters, doi:10.1098/rsbl.2008.0782

Odontocete cetaceans use biosonar clicks to acoustically probe their aquatic 
environment with an aptitude unmatched by man-made sonar.  A cornerstone of 
this ability is their use of short, broadband pulses produced in the region of 
the upper nasal passages.  Here we provide empirical evidence that a beluga 
whale (Delphinapterus leucas) uses two signal generators simultaneously when 
echolocating.  We show that the pulses of the two generators are combined as 
they are transmitted through the melon to produce a single echolocation click 
emitted from the front of the animal.  Generating two pulses probably offers 
the beluga the ability to control the energy and frequency distribution of the 
emitted click and may allow it to acoustically steer its echolocation beam.

A PDF copy of the article is available at 
http://rsbl.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/early/2009/02/27/rsbl.2008.0782.abstract
 or by request from [email protected]. 

Best wishes,
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Marc O. Lammers, Ph.D.
Hawaii Institute of Marine Biology
P.O. Box 1106
Kailua, HI 96734
Tel: +1(808) 375-0010
Fax: +1(808) 247-5831
[email protected]
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