Clicking for calamari: toothed whales can echolocate squid Loligo pealeii

Squid play an important role in biomass turnover in marine ecosystems and constitute a food source for similar to 90% of all echolocating toothed whale species. Nonetheless, it has been hypothesized that the soft bodies of squid provide echoes too weak to be detected by toothed whale biosonars, and...

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Published in:Aquatic Biology
Main Authors: Madsen, P. T., Wilson, M., Johnson, M., Hanlon, R. T., Bocconcelli, A., de Soto, N. Aguilar, Tyack, P. L.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://risweb.st-andrews.ac.uk/portal/en/researchoutput/clicking-for-calamari-toothed-whales-can-echolocate-squid-loligo-pealeii(484bce8a-ab69-4cb2-a621-3d5585bd1695).html
https://doi.org/10.3354/ab00014
id ftunstandrewcris:oai:risweb.st-andrews.ac.uk:publications/484bce8a-ab69-4cb2-a621-3d5585bd1695
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunstandrewcris:oai:risweb.st-andrews.ac.uk:publications/484bce8a-ab69-4cb2-a621-3d5585bd1695 2023-05-15T18:33:24+02:00 Clicking for calamari: toothed whales can echolocate squid Loligo pealeii Madsen, P. T. Wilson, M. Johnson, M. Hanlon, R. T. Bocconcelli, A. de Soto, N. Aguilar Tyack, P. L. 2007 https://risweb.st-andrews.ac.uk/portal/en/researchoutput/clicking-for-calamari-toothed-whales-can-echolocate-squid-loligo-pealeii(484bce8a-ab69-4cb2-a621-3d5585bd1695).html https://doi.org/10.3354/ab00014 eng eng info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess Madsen , P T , Wilson , M , Johnson , M , Hanlon , R T , Bocconcelli , A , de Soto , N A & Tyack , P L 2007 , ' Clicking for calamari: toothed whales can echolocate squid Loligo pealeii ' , Aquatic Biology , vol. 1 , no. 2 , pp. 141-150 . https://doi.org/10.3354/ab00014 article 2007 ftunstandrewcris https://doi.org/10.3354/ab00014 2022-10-13T15:25:36Z Squid play an important role in biomass turnover in marine ecosystems and constitute a food source for similar to 90% of all echolocating toothed whale species. Nonetheless, it has been hypothesized that the soft bodies of squid provide echoes too weak to be detected by toothed whale biosonars, and that only the few hard parts of the squid body may generate significant backscatter. We measured the acoustic backscatter from the common squid Loligo pealeii for signals similar to toothed whale echolocation clicks using an energy detector to mimic the mammalian auditory system. We show that the dorsal target strengths of L. pealeii with mantle lengths between 23 and 26 cm fall in the range from -38 to -44 dB, and that the pen, beak and lenses do not contribute significantly to the backscatter. Thus, the muscular mantle and fins of L. pealeii constitute a sufficient sonar target for individual biosonar detection by toothed whales at ranges between 25 and 325 m, depending on squid size, noise levels, click source levels, and orientation of the ensonified squid. While epipelagic squid must be fast and muscular to catch prey and avoid visual predators, it is hypothesized that some deep-water squid may have adopted passive acoustic crypsis, with a body of low muscle mass and low metabolism that will render them less conspicuous to echolocating predators. Article in Journal/Newspaper toothed whale toothed whales University of St Andrews: Research Portal Aquatic Biology 1 141 150
institution Open Polar
collection University of St Andrews: Research Portal
op_collection_id ftunstandrewcris
language English
description Squid play an important role in biomass turnover in marine ecosystems and constitute a food source for similar to 90% of all echolocating toothed whale species. Nonetheless, it has been hypothesized that the soft bodies of squid provide echoes too weak to be detected by toothed whale biosonars, and that only the few hard parts of the squid body may generate significant backscatter. We measured the acoustic backscatter from the common squid Loligo pealeii for signals similar to toothed whale echolocation clicks using an energy detector to mimic the mammalian auditory system. We show that the dorsal target strengths of L. pealeii with mantle lengths between 23 and 26 cm fall in the range from -38 to -44 dB, and that the pen, beak and lenses do not contribute significantly to the backscatter. Thus, the muscular mantle and fins of L. pealeii constitute a sufficient sonar target for individual biosonar detection by toothed whales at ranges between 25 and 325 m, depending on squid size, noise levels, click source levels, and orientation of the ensonified squid. While epipelagic squid must be fast and muscular to catch prey and avoid visual predators, it is hypothesized that some deep-water squid may have adopted passive acoustic crypsis, with a body of low muscle mass and low metabolism that will render them less conspicuous to echolocating predators.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Madsen, P. T.
Wilson, M.
Johnson, M.
Hanlon, R. T.
Bocconcelli, A.
de Soto, N. Aguilar
Tyack, P. L.
spellingShingle Madsen, P. T.
Wilson, M.
Johnson, M.
Hanlon, R. T.
Bocconcelli, A.
de Soto, N. Aguilar
Tyack, P. L.
Clicking for calamari: toothed whales can echolocate squid Loligo pealeii
author_facet Madsen, P. T.
Wilson, M.
Johnson, M.
Hanlon, R. T.
Bocconcelli, A.
de Soto, N. Aguilar
Tyack, P. L.
author_sort Madsen, P. T.
title Clicking for calamari: toothed whales can echolocate squid Loligo pealeii
title_short Clicking for calamari: toothed whales can echolocate squid Loligo pealeii
title_full Clicking for calamari: toothed whales can echolocate squid Loligo pealeii
title_fullStr Clicking for calamari: toothed whales can echolocate squid Loligo pealeii
title_full_unstemmed Clicking for calamari: toothed whales can echolocate squid Loligo pealeii
title_sort clicking for calamari: toothed whales can echolocate squid loligo pealeii
publishDate 2007
url https://risweb.st-andrews.ac.uk/portal/en/researchoutput/clicking-for-calamari-toothed-whales-can-echolocate-squid-loligo-pealeii(484bce8a-ab69-4cb2-a621-3d5585bd1695).html
https://doi.org/10.3354/ab00014
genre toothed whale
toothed whales
genre_facet toothed whale
toothed whales
op_source Madsen , P T , Wilson , M , Johnson , M , Hanlon , R T , Bocconcelli , A , de Soto , N A & Tyack , P L 2007 , ' Clicking for calamari: toothed whales can echolocate squid Loligo pealeii ' , Aquatic Biology , vol. 1 , no. 2 , pp. 141-150 . https://doi.org/10.3354/ab00014
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3354/ab00014
container_title Aquatic Biology
container_volume 1
container_start_page 141
op_container_end_page 150
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