| Literature DB >> 26340942 |
Mario Rivera Chavarría1, Jorge Castro2, Arturo Camacho3.
Abstract
The Antillean manatee (Trichechus manatus manatus) is an endangered marine mammal that inhabits the Caribbean Sea and riverine systems in Central America. Their acoustic behavior is relevant for individual identification, mating and parental care. Manatees produce tonal sounds with highest energy in the second harmonic (usually 5 kHz), and their audiogram indicates sensitivity from 0.3 kHz to 90 kHz with lowest thresholds in the 16 to 18 kHz range. We recorded manatees in the San San River, a highly polluted riverine system in Panama, using a stereo array. Frequency transmission experiments were conducted in four subhabitats, categorized using riverine vegetation. Incidental interactions of manatees and small motorboats were examined. Acoustic transmission was linearly related to tonal vocalization characters: correlations were stronger in freshwater than in transition and marine environments. Two bands, 0.6 to 2 kHz and 3 to 8 kHz, attenuate similarly in all subhabitats, and these bands encompass F0 (tone) and peak frequency respectively of manatee tonal calls. Based on our data we conclude that frequency transmission depends mainly on river depth and bottom characteristics, also motorboat sounds mask signals from 3.5 kHz to 8 kHz, which overlaps the peak frequency of tonal calls. In spite of differences between acoustic transmission in subhabitats of the San San River, manatees utilize bands that transmit efficiently in all subhabitats.Entities:
Keywords: Acoustics; Hearing; Manatee; Vocalization
Year: 2015 PMID: 26340942 PMCID: PMC4610227 DOI: 10.1242/bio.013631
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Open ISSN: 2046-6390 Impact factor: 2.422
Fig. 1.Schematic map of the study area with the subhabitats marked with letters.
Fig. 2.Plots showing the averages of frequency transmission experiments. Results of frequency transmission experiments in different subhabitats A–D. Location A is a freshwater site which riverine vegetation is dominated by grasses for agricultural use. It does not show the 1000 m curve due to wave physical limitation caused by sinuosity. Location B is fresh water environment with different riverine vegetation (mangrove and ferns). Location C is a transition zone populated mainly by mangroves. Location D is a marine coastal lagoon with sedimentary acoustic barriers with very limited transmission. All the sites share frequency propagation characteristics highlighted by shadowed areas. Frequency cutoffs were estimated using Eqn 1. Vibrosense related curve was plotted with a discontinuous line in order to preserve Gerstein et al's. manatee audiogram (Gerstein et al., 1999), but it is irrelevant for analysis purposes. Vertical double line shows the frequency cutoff.
Average characteristics of Antillean manatee tonal vocalizations
Fig. 3.Vocalization average characteristics weighted with sensitivity curve. Highlighted areas correspond to the bands that show similar power loss in the frequency between all transmission experiments. Average F0 (2.9 kHz) and peak frequency mode (5 kHz) are marked with discontinuous vertical lines.
Fig. 4.Representative spectrogram showing tonal vocalizations and masking noise from distant motorboats (more than 25 m from manatees). The band from 3.5 kHz to 8 kHz is delimited by two lines. Manatee tonal vocalizations are marked with arrows.