Dear Colleagues,

My co-authors and I are pleased to announce our recent publication.

Probert R, Bastian A, Elwen SH, James BS, Gridley T (2021) Vocal correlates
of arousal in bottlenose dolphins (*Tursiops* spp.) in human care. PLoS ONE
16(9): e0250913. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0250913


Abstract:

Human-controlled regimes can entrain behavioural responses and may impact
animal welfare. Therefore, understanding the influence of schedules on
animal behaviour can be a valuable tool to improve welfare, however
information on behaviour overnight and in the absence of husbandry staff
remains rare. Bottlenose dolphins (*Tursiops* spp.) are highly social
marine mammals and the most common cetacean found in captivity. They
communicate using frequency modulated signature whistles, a whistle type
that is individually distinctive and used as a contact call. We
investigated the vocalisations of ten dolphins housed in three social
groups at uShaka Sea World dolphinarium to determine how patterns in
acoustic behaviour link to dolphinarium routines. Investigation focused on
overnight behaviour, housing decisions, weekly patterns, and transitional
periods between the presence and absence of husbandry staff. Recordings
were made from 17h00 – 07h00 over 24 nights, spanning May to August 2018.
Whistle (including signature whistle) presence and production rate
decreased soon after husbandry staff left the facility, was low over night,
and increased upon staff arrival. Results indicated elevated arousal states
particularly associated with the morning feeding regime. Housing in the
pool configuration that allowed observation of staff activities from all
social groups was characterised by an increase in whistle presence and
rates. Heightened arousal associated with staff presence was reflected in
the structural characteristics of signature whistles, particularly maximum
frequency, frequency range and number of whistle loops. We identified
individual differences in both production rate and the structural
modification of signature whistles under different contexts. Overall, these
results revealed a link between scheduled activity and associated
behavioural responses, which can be used as a baseline for future welfare
monitoring where changes from normal behaviour may reflect shifts in
welfare state.


Please feel free to contact me if you have any questions:
[email protected]


Best regards,

-- 
Rachel Probert
PhD candidate, Marine Biology, Bioacoustics
Sea Search Research and Conservation, Muizenberg, Cape Town
School of Life Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Westville

Cell: +27767831809

https://www.buymeacoffee.com/SeaSearch
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