4.7 Article

Early onset of postnatal individual vocal recognition in a highly colonial mammal species

Journal

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2022.1769

Keywords

acoustic communication; vocal recognition; ontogeny; parent-offspring communication; pinnipeds; cape fur seal

Funding

  1. Namibian Ministry of Fisheries and Marine Resources
  2. Namibian Chamber of Environment

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Mother-young vocal recognition is common in mammals. This study shows that Cape fur seal females can recognize their pup's voice within 2-4 hours after birth, and that pups develop this ability within 4-6 hours after birth. This is the fastest establishment of mother-young vocal recognition reported for any mammalian species, including humans.
Mother-young vocal recognition is widespread in mammals. The features of vocal recognition are known to be shaped by the ecological constraints faced by each species. In some species, a rapid establishment of mother-young vocal recognition is crucial for offspring's survival. However, knowledge of the precise features of this recognition system, especially the timing of the onset in the first hours after birth, is often lacking. Here we show that Cape fur seal females can recognize their pup's voice 2-4 h after parturition and that pups develop this aptitude 4-6 h after birth. This study is the first to investigate this mechanism in a wild and free-ranging mammal from only 2 h after birth. We report the fastest establishment of mother-young vocal recognition for any mammalian species, including humans, described to date. Such early vocal identification in pups suggests an in utero vocal imprinting. These findings highlight the synergistic role of environmental constraints and biological traits in optimizing the timing of individual vocal recognition onset in vertebrates.

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