Dear Colleagues,

 

The following paper has recently been published online by the journal 
Naturwissenschaften.

 

Rehn, N., Filatova, O.A., Durban, J.W. & Foote, A.D. (2010). Cross-cultural and 
cross-ecotype production of a killer whale 'excitement' call suggests 
universality.  Naturwissenschaften, DOI 10.1007/s00114-010-0732-5, published 
online 12 November 2010.



Abstract



Facial and vocal expressions of emotion have been found in a number of social 
mammal species and are thought to have evolved to aid social communication. 
There has been much debate about whether such signals are culturally inherited 
or are truly biologically innate. Evidence for the innateness of such signals 
can come from cross-cultural studies. Previous studies have identified a 
vocalisation (the V4 or 'excitement' call) associated with high arousal 
behaviours in a population of killer whales in British Columbia, Canada. In 
this study, we compared recordings from three different socially and 
reproductively isolated ecotypes of killer whales, including five vocal clans 
of one ecotype, each clan having discrete culturally transmitted vocal 
traditions. The V4 call was found in recordings of each ecotype and each vocal 
clan. Nine independent observers reproduced our classification of the V4 call 
from each population with high inter-observer agreement. Our results suggest 
the V4 call may be universal in Pacific killer whale populations and that 
transmission of this call is independent of cultural tradition or ecotype. We 
argue that such universality is more consistent with an innate vocalisation 
than one acquired through social learning and may be linked to its apparent 
function of motivational expression.



Keywords Innateness . Universality . Close-range interactions . Vocal signal



A pdf copy of the article is available here:  
http://www.springerlink.com/content/008330p691718502/.

Any queries should be directed to [email protected].



Best wishes,

Nicola Rehn




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