Dear all

It is my pleasure to announce our new paper on the evolution of NBHF signals in 
toothed whales

Galatius A, Olsen MT, Steeman ME, Racicot RA, Bradshaw CD, Miller LA (2018) 
Raising your voice: Evolution of narrow band high frequency hearing in 
odontocetes. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 126 (2): 213-224, 
doi:10.1093/biolinnean/bly194

Abstract: Cetaceans use sound for communication, navigation and finding prey. 
Most extant odontocetes produce broadband (BB) biosonar clicks covering 
frequency ranges from tens of kilohertz to 150-170 kHz. In contrast, the 
biosonar clicks of some odontocetes are unique, being narrow in bandwidth with 
high centroid frequency (NBHF), peak frequencies being at 125-140 kHz and 
bandwidths of 11-20 kHz. Thirteen species within four families (Phocoenidae, 
Pontoporiidae, Kogiidae, Delphinidae) are known to produce these signals, 
implying convergent evolution under strong selective drivers. Several 
hypotheses have been proposed, including acoustic crypsis to escape predation 
by killer whales, but none has provided comprehensive explanation of the timing 
of NBHF evolution and the pressures driving sound production to such extremes. 
Using molecular phylogenetics and the cochlea anatomy of extinct and extant 
taxa, we demonstrate that early NBHF adaptations occurred at least 10 Mya, and 
possibly up to 18 Mya, indicating that killer whales cannot have been the sole 
driving force of NBHF signals, but that now extinct odontocetes may have 
provided similar pressures. Using palaeoclimate modelling, we further 
demonstrate that the upper advantageous spectral window for NBHF signals at 
around 130 kHz has persisted throughout most of the global sea area since the 
mid-Miocene, covering all known instances of NBHF evolution.

Please see https://academic.oup.com/biolinnean/article/126/2/213/5244783, or 
email me for a pdf copy
Kind regards
Morten Tange Olsen

Morten Tange Olsen
Assistant Professor, Curator of Marine Mammals

Statens Naturhistoriske Museum
Københavns Universitet
Section for Evolutionary Genomics

MOB +45 42661525
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>


[cid:[email protected]]




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