Sperm whales use their gigantic nose to produce the most powerful sounds in the animal kingdom, presumably to echolocate deep-sea prey at long ranges and possibly to debilitate prey. To test these hypotheses, we deployed sound recording tags (DTAG-4) on the tip of the nose of three sperm whales. One of these recordings yielded over 6000 echo streams from organisms detected up to 144 m ahead of the whale, supporting a long-range prey detection function of the sperm whale biosonar. The whale navigated this complex acoustic scene by maintaining a stable, long-range acoustic gaze suggesting continual resource evaluation. Less than 10% of the echoic organisms recorded by the tag were targeted for capture and only 18% of the buzzes were emitted w...
Sperm whales produce different click types for echolocation and communication. Usual clicks and buzz...
Sperm whales produce different click types for echolocation and communication. Usual clicks and buzz...
Auditory masking by anthropogenic noise may impact marine mammals relying on sound for important lif...
Sperm whales use their gigantic nose to produce the most powerful sounds in the animal kingdom, pres...
Predators make foraging decisions based upon sensory information about resource availability, but li...
Predators make foraging decisions based upon sensory information about resource availability, but li...
The sperm whale carries a hypertrophied nose that generates powerful clicks for long-range echolocat...
The sperm whale carries a hypertrophied nose that generates powerful clicks for long-range echolocat...
Field work in Norway was funded by the Carlsberg Foundation and the National Danish Research Council...
The fieldwork was funded by a grant from the Carlsberg Foundation to B. Møhl and ONR, SERDP and FNU ...
During foraging dives, sperm whales (Physeter macrocephalus) produce long series of regular clicks a...
Sperm whales generate transient sounds (clicks) when foraging. These clicks have been described as e...
International audienceSperm whales generate transient sounds (clicks) when foraging. These clicks ha...
Toothed whales echolocating in the wild generate clicks with low repetition rates to locate prey but...
This dissertation uses videocameras, tags and acoustic recorders to investigate the diving and acous...
Sperm whales produce different click types for echolocation and communication. Usual clicks and buzz...
Sperm whales produce different click types for echolocation and communication. Usual clicks and buzz...
Auditory masking by anthropogenic noise may impact marine mammals relying on sound for important lif...
Sperm whales use their gigantic nose to produce the most powerful sounds in the animal kingdom, pres...
Predators make foraging decisions based upon sensory information about resource availability, but li...
Predators make foraging decisions based upon sensory information about resource availability, but li...
The sperm whale carries a hypertrophied nose that generates powerful clicks for long-range echolocat...
The sperm whale carries a hypertrophied nose that generates powerful clicks for long-range echolocat...
Field work in Norway was funded by the Carlsberg Foundation and the National Danish Research Council...
The fieldwork was funded by a grant from the Carlsberg Foundation to B. Møhl and ONR, SERDP and FNU ...
During foraging dives, sperm whales (Physeter macrocephalus) produce long series of regular clicks a...
Sperm whales generate transient sounds (clicks) when foraging. These clicks have been described as e...
International audienceSperm whales generate transient sounds (clicks) when foraging. These clicks ha...
Toothed whales echolocating in the wild generate clicks with low repetition rates to locate prey but...
This dissertation uses videocameras, tags and acoustic recorders to investigate the diving and acous...
Sperm whales produce different click types for echolocation and communication. Usual clicks and buzz...
Sperm whales produce different click types for echolocation and communication. Usual clicks and buzz...
Auditory masking by anthropogenic noise may impact marine mammals relying on sound for important lif...