Dear all,

My co-authors and I are pleased to announce the recent publication of our 
research article:

Ward, R., Parnum, I., Erbe, C. & Salgado-Kent C. (2016) Whistle Characteristics 
of Indo-Pacific Bottlenose Dolphins (Tursiops aduncus) in the Fremantle Inner 
Harbour, Western Australia. Acoustics Australia 44: 159-169

Abstract:
Bottlenose dolphins use whistles to communicate with their conspecifics and 
maintain group cohesion. We recorded 477 whistles of Indo-Pacific bottlenose 
dolphins (Tursiops aduncus) in the Fremantle Inner Harbour, Western Australia, 
on nine occasions over a six-week period during May/June 2013. Over half (57 %) 
of the whistles had complex contours exhibiting at least one local extremum, 
while 32 % were straight upsweeps, 5 % downsweeps and 6 % constant-frequency. 
About 60 % of whistles occurred in trains. Fundamental frequency ranged from 
1.1 to 18.4 kHz and whistle duration from 0.05 to 1.15 s. The maximum numbers 
of local extrema and inflection points were 7 and 9, respectively. Whistle 
parameters compared well to those of measurements made from other T. aduncus 
populations around Australia. Observed differences might be due to ambient 
noise rather than geographic separation.

The article is available from the publishers website 
(http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40857-015-0041-4) or by request to 
[email protected]

Many thanks,

Rhianne Ward
PhD Candidate | Centre for Marine Science and Technology

Curtin University
Mobile | 0400 737 545

Email | [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Project Web |  www.gabrightwhales.com<http://www.gabrightwhales.com>

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