International audienceOdontocetes modulate the rhythm of their echolocation clicks to draw information about their environment. When they approach preys to capture, they speed up their emissions to increase the sampling rate of "distant touch" and improve information update. This global acceleration turns into a "terminal buzz" also described in bats, which is a click train with drastic increase in rate, just as reaching the prey. This study documents and analyses under human care bottlenose dolphins' echolocation activity, when approaching non-alimentary targets. Four dolphins' locomotor and clicking behaviours were recorded during training sessions, when sent to immersed objects pointed by their trainers. Results illustrate that these dol...
Vocalisations of free-ranging Hector's dolphins were recorded with wide-band recording equipment. Pr...
Echolocating animals exercise an extensive control over the spectral and temporal properties of thei...
In dolphins, natural selection has developed unihemispheric sleep where alternating hemispheres of t...
International audienceOdontocetes modulate the rhythm of their echolocation clicks to draw informati...
Echolocating toothed whales generally adjust click intensity and rate according to target range to e...
Early studies that categorized odontocete pulsed sounds had few means of discriminating signals used...
International audienceBy-catch is the most direct threat to marine mammals globally. Acoustic repell...
Four groups of toothed whales have independently evolved to produce narrowband high-frequency (NBHF)...
Odontocetes are assumed to use echolocation for navigation and foraging, but neither of these uses o...
Echolocating bats and toothed whales probe their environment with ultrasonic sound pulses, using ret...
Emitted biosonar clicks and auditory evoked potential (AEP) responses triggered by the clicks were s...
Toothed whales echolocating in the wild generate clicks with low repetition rates to locate prey but...
Vocalisations of free-ranging Hector's dolphins were recorded with wide-band recording equipment. Pr...
Echolocating animals exercise an extensive control over the spectral and temporal properties of thei...
In dolphins, natural selection has developed unihemispheric sleep where alternating hemispheres of t...
International audienceOdontocetes modulate the rhythm of their echolocation clicks to draw informati...
Echolocating toothed whales generally adjust click intensity and rate according to target range to e...
Early studies that categorized odontocete pulsed sounds had few means of discriminating signals used...
International audienceBy-catch is the most direct threat to marine mammals globally. Acoustic repell...
Four groups of toothed whales have independently evolved to produce narrowband high-frequency (NBHF)...
Odontocetes are assumed to use echolocation for navigation and foraging, but neither of these uses o...
Echolocating bats and toothed whales probe their environment with ultrasonic sound pulses, using ret...
Emitted biosonar clicks and auditory evoked potential (AEP) responses triggered by the clicks were s...
Toothed whales echolocating in the wild generate clicks with low repetition rates to locate prey but...
Vocalisations of free-ranging Hector's dolphins were recorded with wide-band recording equipment. Pr...
Echolocating animals exercise an extensive control over the spectral and temporal properties of thei...
In dolphins, natural selection has developed unihemispheric sleep where alternating hemispheres of t...