Hi Everyone,

We are pleased to announce the publication of a new paper in Royal Society Open 
Science:

Individual, unit and vocal clan level identity cues in sperm whale codas
By: Shane Gero, Hal Whitehead, and Luke Rendell

The paper is OPEN ACCESS and available here:


HTML Full Text: 
http://rsos.royalsocietypublishing.org/cgi/content/full/rsos.150372?ijkey=gMaN5mQ56lOFJ4z&keytype=ref

PDF: 
http://rsos.royalsocietypublishing.org/cgi/reprint/rsos.150372?ijkey=gMaN5mQ56lOFJ4z&keytype=ref

Abstract

The 'social complexity hypothesis' suggests that complex social structure is a 
driver of diversity in animal communication systems. Sperm whales have a 
hierarchically structured society in which the largest affiliative structures, 
the vocal clans, are marked on ocean-basin scales by culturally transmitted 
dialects of acoustic signals known as 'codas'. We examined variation in coda 
repertoires among both individual whales and social units-the basic element of 
sperm whale society-using data from nine Caribbean social units across six 
years. Codas were assigned to individuals using photo-identification and 
acoustic size measurement, and we calculated similarity between repertoires 
using both continuous and categorical methods. We identified 21 coda types. Two 
of those ('1+1+3' and '5R1') made up 65% of the codas recorded, were shared 
across all units and have dominated repertoires in this population for at least 
30 years. Individuals appear to differ in the way they produce '5R1' but not 
'1+1+3' coda. Units use distinct 4-click coda types which contribute to making 
unit repertoires distinctive. Our results support the social complexity 
hypothesis in a marine species as different patterns of variation between coda 
types suggest divergent functions, perhaps representing selection for identity 
signals at several levels of social structure.



Cited as: Gero, S., Whitehead, H. & Rendell, L. 2016 Individual, unit and vocal 
clan level identity cues in sperm whale codas. R. Soc. Open Sci. 3, 150372. 
(doi:10.1098/rsos.150372)

My very best,
Shane

****************************
Shane Gero, Ph.D.
Founder of The Dominica Sperm Whale 
Project<http://www.thespermwhaleproject.org/> &
FNU Research Fellow
Marine Bioacoustics Lab<http://www.marinebioacoustics.com/>
Institute for Bioscience
Aarhus University
Denmark

[home-icon20]<http://www.shanegero.com/> [Twitter_2012_bird_icon 20] 
<https://twitter.com/sgero>  [linkedin_logo20] 
<http://ca.linkedin.com/in/shanegero>

Learn more about The Dominica Sperm Whale Project at 
http://www.thespermwhaleproject.org<http://www.thespermwhaleproject.org/> Find 
us on Facebook<https://www.facebook.com/spermwhaleproject> or Follow 
@DomWhale<https://twitter.com/DomWhale>




****************************
Shane Gero, Ph.D.
FNU Research Fellow
Marine Bioacoustics Lab<http://www.marinebioacoustics.com/>
Institute for Bioscience
Aarhus University
Denmark

[home-icon20]<http://www.shanegero.com/> [Twitter_2012_bird_icon 20] 
<https://twitter.com/sgero>  [linkedin_logo20] 
<http://ca.linkedin.com/in/shanegero>

Learn more about The Dominica Sperm Whale Project at 
http://www.thespermwhaleproject.org<http://www.thespermwhaleproject.org/> Find 
us on Facebook<https://www.facebook.com/spermwhaleproject> or Follow 
@DomWhale<https://twitter.com/DomWhale>


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