4.5 Article

Pups crying bass: vocal adaptation for avoidance of age-dependent predation risk in ground squirrels?

Journal

BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY AND SOCIOBIOLOGY
Volume 62, Issue 2, Pages 181-191

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00265-007-0452-9

Keywords

Spermophilus suslicus; Spermophilus fulvus; alarm call; vocal mimicry; infanticide; antipredator behaviour

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In most mammals, larger adult body size correlates with lower fundamental frequency and more closely spaced formants in vocalizations relative to juveniles. In alarm whistles of two free-living rodents, the speckled ground squirrel Spermophilus suslicus and yellow ground squirrel S. fulvus, these cues to body size were absent despite prominent differences in body weight and skull and larynx sizes between juveniles and adults. No significant correlations were found between the individual maximum fundamental frequency and body weight, both within age classes and for pooled samples of all animals within species. Furthermore, the mean alarm whistle maximum fundamental frequencies did not differ significantly between age classes (juvenile versus adult) in the speckled squirrel and were even significantly lower in juvenile yellow squirrels. We discuss the hypothesis that the obfuscation of vocal differences between juvenile and adult squirrels may represent a special adaptation of pup vocal behaviour-a form of vocal mimicry, resulting in imitation of adult vocal pattern to avoid infanticide and age-dependent predation risk.

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