| Literature DB >> 17692128 |
Laura J May-Collado1, Ingi Agnarsson, Douglas Wartzok.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: It is widely held that in toothed whales, high frequency tonal sounds called 'whistles' evolved in association with 'sociality' because in delphinids they are used in a social context. Recently, whistles were hypothesized to be an evolutionary innovation of social dolphins (the 'dolphin hypothesis'). However, both 'whistles' and 'sociality' are broad concepts each representing a conglomerate of characters. Many non-delphinids, whether solitary or social, produce tonal sounds that share most of the acoustic characteristics of delphinid whistles. Furthermore, hypotheses of character correlation are best tested in a phylogenetic context, which has hitherto not been done. Here we summarize data from over 300 studies on cetacean tonal sounds and social structure and phylogenetically test existing hypotheses on their co-evolution.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17692128 PMCID: PMC2000896 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2148-7-136
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Evol Biol ISSN: 1471-2148 Impact factor: 3.260
Figure 1Optimizations of tonal sounds (a) and whistles (b) versus sociality using the broad concept approach [see additional file 1]. A brief glance at the black branches (indicating presence of tonal sounds/whistles and 'complex' sociality) on each side does not suggest detailed correspondence of acoustic structure with sociality. In other words whistles have a different phylogenetic distribution than does complex sociality etc, indicating that their co-evolutionary history (if any) may be more complicated than previously thought.
Figure 2Optimization of group size in Cetacea (using natural log). Dark purple and blue colored branches indicate small groups and demark most of the 'basal' whales. More brightly colored (green, yellow and red) indicate larger groups. The phylogeny suggests gradual increase in group size in the lineage leading to Delphinidae, with independent evolution of huge groups (red) in several lineages and some reversals to smaller groups (e.g. Cephalorynchus hectori).
Definitions of sociality and tonal sound characters and respective states
| SOCIALITY-BROAD CONCEPT APPROACH | ||||
| SOCIALITY | Species do not live in groups. Mainly found singly or in pairs. Pairs are primarily mother with their calf. Sometimes groups may form but these are temporal (e.g., breeding, feeding, or migration) and do not show any social structure apart from that of mother and calf | Group living species. In addition to mother and calf associations animals are continuously associating with other conspecific. These associations may be short or long-term. Animals within a group may or not be related. Living singly is extremely rare within this species and it is probably limited to old or outcast animals. | ||
| SOCIAL STRUCTURE | Solitary species with strong social bonds limited to the time the calf is dependent of the mother. Animals may aggregate for breeding, feeding, or migration but associations are limited to the duration of these periods. Groups are not socially structured | Group living species where all group members show weak or fluid associations. Both sexes disperse from natal group. | Group living species. Group members show fluid associations but may have long-term associations with specific group members that are not close relatives e.g, male alliances and coalitions. Both sexes disperse from natal group. | Group living species. Group members are close relatives. Natal philopatry is sex dependent but in some species there is no dispersion. Long-term associations. |
| SOCIALITY-MULTI COMPONENT APPROACH | ||||
| Species described as largely solitary, but that are often found in pairs (mother-calf) | Group living species that are generally found in small groups | Group living species that are generally found in medium to large size schools | ||
| Short when found in non-socially structured groups. Limited to the time the calf is dependent of the mother. | Species where group stability is short. Animals join and leave the group through the day. Described in literature as fluid societies. | Species with fluid societies but were some conspecific group show relatively long lasting associations e.g., male alliances, female nurseries | Species that live in their natal group for life. Animals are related to group members and dispersal is limited showing long-lasting associations | |
| Mother and calf | Segregated by age and sex | Mixed (contain both sexes and several ages) | Both segregated and mixed (state only used for the test of association not for optimizations) | |
| TONAL SOUND COMPLEXITY DISCRETE APPROACH | ||||
| Mean inflection point is less or equal to 1 | Mean inflection point is more than 1 | |||
| Mean inflection point is between 0–1 | Mean inflection point is between 1.1–2 | Mean inflection point is between 2.1–3 | Mean inflection point is more than 3.1 | |
Figure 3Optimizations of social structure as a four state character (a) leaving polymorphic species as such, (b) lowest social state, (c) highest social state. All analyses were done using the highest social state optimizations (see Methods).
Figure 4Optimization of Cetacean tonal sound standard acoustic parameters (using natural log). Dark colors (purple and blue) indicate low values, while brighter colors (green, yellow, red) indicate higher values.
Figure 5Regression analysis between independent contrasts of mean group size and mean number of inflection points. One conspicuous outlier (arrow) represents a contrast including the killer whale (Orcinus orca) which forms relatively small social groups but produces highly modulated whistles. It has been proposed that the killer whale uses whistles in a manner different from any other delphinid to indicate motivational state. That multiple factors are at work shaping tonal sounds in cetaceans may obscure and make difficult to discover true co-evolutinary histories of characters. Accordingly when O. orca is removed from the analysis the regression between the two characters becomes stronger.
Probabilities of association between sociality (selecting the highest social state for polymorphic species) and tonal sound complexity. Significant positive associations at p-values > 0.972 and 0.973** for two and four state complexity characters, respectively and significant negative associations at p-values < 0.028 and 0.027* for two and four state complexity characters, respectively
| TONAL SOUND COMPLEXITY [TWO & FOUR STATE CHARACTER] | SOCIAL STRUCTURE [FOUR STATE CHARACTER] | |||
| 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | |
| 0 (≤ 1 mean inflection point) | 0.0821 | 0.0536 | -0.0424 | -0.0047 |
| 0.798 | 0.728 | p < 0.0001* | 0.003* | |
| 1 (≤ 1 mean inflection point) | -0.0440 | 0.00045 | 0.113 | 0.0360 |
| p < 0.0001* | 0.90 | 0.99** | 0.99** | |
| 0 (0–1) | 0.084 | -0.00029 | -0.0338 | 0.009 |
| 0.93 | 0.055 | 0.002* | 0.88 | |
| 1 (1.1–2) | -0.038 | 0.027 | 0.0781 | 0.022 |
| 0.002* | 0.91 | 0.92 | 0.92 | |
| 2 (2.1–3) | -0.003 | 0.0121 | 0.0198 | -0.0033 |
| 0.018* | 0.89 | 0.91 | 0.014* | |
| 3 (>3.1) | -0.0046 | 0.0151 | 0.0065 | 0.0023 |
| 0.012* | 0.90 | 0.86 | 0.84 | |
*Significant negative associations **Significant positive associations
D = 0.362 p < 0.0001, np-value = 1465, nD = 2000 Social Structure and Tonal Sound Complexity (4-state)
D = 0.376 p < 0.0001 np-value = 343, nD = 2000 Social Structure and Tonal Sound Complexity (2-state)