Stereotyped Calling Patterns of a Male Weddell Seal (Leptonychotes weddellii)

From the abstract of the attached paper:\n\nUnderwater calling behaviour between breathing bouts of a single adult male Weddell seal (Leptonychotes weddellii) was examined with respect to call type and timing late in the breeding season at Davis Station, Antarctica. Underwater calls and breathing so...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Australian Antarctic Division (isOwnedBy)
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: data.gov.au
Subjects:
AMD
Online Access:https://researchdata.edu.au/stereotyped-calling-patterns-leptonychotes-weddellii/1933941
http://data.gov.au/dataset/68ac9ba0-3e27-4c09-a927-02513aa81cc6
Description
Summary:From the abstract of the attached paper:\n\nUnderwater calling behaviour between breathing bouts of a single adult male Weddell seal (Leptonychotes weddellii) was examined with respect to call type and timing late in the breeding season at Davis Station, Antarctica. Underwater calls and breathing sounds were recorded on 1 and 8 December 1997. Thirty-seven sequences of calls prior to surfacing to breathe and 36 post-submerging sets of calls were analysed with respect to probability of call type occurrence and timing. Dives were 461 plus or minus 259 seconds (mean plus or minus standard deviation). The seal called every 29.7 plus or minus 56.2 seconds throughout a dive. The first call after submerging was usually (n = 29 of 36) a low frequency (less than 0.8 kHz) growl. Three patterns of three- to five-call type sequences were made following 28 of 36 breathing bouts. Call type patterns after submerging exhibited fewer different sequences than those before surfacing (chi-squared = 61.42, DF = 4, p less than 0.000001). The call usage patterns before surfacing were diverse and did not indicate when the seal was going to surface, a time when he would be vulnerable to attack from below. Our findings suggest the hypotheses that territorial male Weddell seals call throughout each dive and use stereotyped call patterns to identify themselves while vocally asserting dominance.\n\nThis work was completed as part of ASAC project 2122 (ASAC_2122).\n\nThe fields in this dataset are:\n\nTape number\nSequence per tape\nSequence entire data\nCall types\nCount since last breath\nLast breathing bout number\nCount prior to next breath\nTime in tape (seconds)\nEnd time of last breath\nStart time of next breath\nTime since dive\n\nThe 'sequence' relates to the sequence of call types that are given between the end of the last breath of a breathing bout and the beginning of the first breath the next time the seal surfaces to breathe. Essentially the report relates to the stereotyped nature of the call types, especially just after the ...