| Literature DB >> 29513670 |
Sabrina N Linn1,2, Michael Boeer3, Marina Scheumann1.
Abstract
Describing vocal repertoires represents an essential step towards gaining an overview about the complexity of acoustic communication in a given species. The analysis of infant vocalisations is essential for understanding the development and usage of species-specific vocalisations, but is often underrepresented, especially in species with long inter-birth intervals such as the white rhinoceros. Thus, this study aimed for the first time to characterise the infant and juvenile vocal repertoire of the Southern white rhinoceros and to relate these findings to the adult vocal repertoire. The behaviour of seven mother-reared white rhinoceros calves (two males, five females) and one hand-reared calf (male), ranging from one month to four years, was simultaneously audio and video-taped at three zoos. Normally reared infants and juveniles uttered four discriminable call types (Whine, Snort, Threat, and Pant) that were produced in different behavioural contexts. All call types were also uttered by the hand-reared calf. Call rates of Whines, but not of the other call types, decreased with age. These findings provide the first evidence that infant and juvenile rhinoceros utter specific call types in distinct contexts, even if they grow up with limited social interaction with conspecifics. By comparing our findings with the current literature on vocalisations of adult white rhinoceros and other solitary rhinoceros species, we discuss to which extent differences in the social lifestyle across species affect acoustic communication in mammals.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29513670 PMCID: PMC5841651 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0192166
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Demographic data of subjects and number of selected high-quality calls per call type used for the acoustic analyses.
| Name | Zoo | Sex | Age in months | Pant | Snort | Threat | Whine |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Keeva | Augsburg Zoo | Female | 1 | - | - | 5 | - |
| Kibo | Augsburg Zoo | Male | 2 | 20 | 21 | 10 | 21 |
| Abasi | Serengeti-Park Hodenhagen | Male | 4–5 | 20 | 6 | - | 21 |
| 32 | 47 | 13 | 21 | - | |||
| 42 | 3 | - | - | - | |||
| Abebi | Dortmund Zoo | Female | 5 | - | 29 | 2 | 21 |
| Tatu | Serengeti-Park Hodenhagen | Female | 8–9 | - | 5 | - | 6 |
| 19–20 | - | 1 | - | 15 | |||
| Dinari | Serengeti-Park Hodenhagen | Male | 9–10 | - | 6 | 2 | 16 |
| 19–20 | 4 | 4 | - | - | |||
| Lara | Serengeti-Park Hodenhagen | Female | 11–12 | 7 | 6 | 2 | 20 |
| 39–40 | 3 | 16 | 47 | - | |||
| 49–50 | 9 | 6 | 23 | - | |||
| Makena | Serengeti-Park Hodenhagen | Female | 15 | 2 | 5 | 7 | - |
| 25–26 | 5 | 2 | 1 | - |
* subjects were recorded in different years.
+ hand-reared calf.
Fig 1Examples of sonograms for the different call types.
Whines (A-D) showing temporal and spectral variations of the contour of the fundamental frequency; Snort without and with pulsed structure; Threat and Pant.
Description of measured acoustic parameters.
| Parameter | Definition |
|---|---|
| DUR [s] | Time between the onset and the offset of a call. |
| VOI [%] | Percentage of voiced frames of a call. |
| COG [Hz] | Centre of gravity—mean frequency of the spectrum. |
| SD [Hz] | Standard deviation of the frequency in a spectrum. |
| SKE | Skewness of the spectrum—difference between the spectral distribution below and the spectral distribution above the COG. |
| KUR | Kurtosis of the spectrum—difference between the spectral around the COG and a Gaussian distribution. |
| 25% QUART [Hz] | Frequency of the first quarter (25%) of total energy in the spectrum. |
| 50% QUART [Hz] | Frequency of the second quarter (50%) of total energy in the spectrum. |
| 75% QUART [Hz] | Frequency of the third quarter (75%) of total energy in the spectrum. |
| ENTR | Wiener entropy—ratio of geometric to arithmetic energy. |
| HNR [db] | Harmonic-to-noise ratio as the ratio of harmonic to atonal energy. |
| MINF0 [Hz] | Minimum fundamental frequency of a call. |
| MAXF0 [Hz] | Maximum fundamental frequency of a call |
| MEANF0 [Hz] | Mean fundamental frequency of a call. |
| SDF0 [Hz] | Standard deviation of the fundamental frequency of a call. |
1 measured in PRAAT.
2 measured in AVISOFT at the location of maximum amplitude.
*only measured for tonal calls (Whine).
Description of behavioural categories.
| Behaviour | Definition |
|---|---|
| Resting | Subject stood, sat or lay and showed no activity or locomotion. |
| Feeding | Subjects took food (grass, pellets, salt) or water into its mouth and chewed. |
| Locomotion | Subject changed position or moved around. |
| Comfort behaviour | Subject wallowed in mud or rubbed its body on objects in the enclosure. |
| Manipulation | Subject pawed with its horn on the ground or pushed/lifted objects. |
| Sniffing | Subject sniffed the ground/objects or urine/faeces of other group members. |
| Defaecation & Urination | Subject voided faeces or urine. |
| Active approach | Subject moved directly to other group members or followed other group members. |
| Passive approach | Other group members moved directly towards the subject or followed the subject. |
| Socio-positive behaviour | Subject made physical contact with any body part of another group member or another group member made physical contact with the subject (e.g. rubbing, sniffing). Thereby, rhinoceros can touch each other with their nose (naso-nasal contact). |
| Socio-negative behaviour | Subject (was) pushed or chased (by) another group member. Subject fled or avoided the other group members. Attacks using their horns could be observed. |
| Suckling | Subject drank from the cow`s udder. |
| Suckling attempt/begging | Subject repeatedly approached and touched the mother´s hind legs or teats attempting to make nipple contact and was nursed shortly after that. |
| Isolation | Subject was alone; group members were at a distance greater than 2 adult body lengths. |
Mean and standard deviation of the acoustic parameters for each call type as well as results of the univariate ANOVA comparing the four call types.
| Parameter | WHINE (N = 120) | SNORT (N = 120) | THREAT (N = 120) | PANT (N = 120) | F | p |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nind | 8 (6) | 8 (7) | 8 (7) | 6 (5) | ||
| DUR [s] | 0.65±0.59 | 0.55±0.29 | 0.27±0.13 | 0.32±0.19 | 4.645 | |
| VOI [%] | 84.35±26.61 | 0.00±0.00 | 0.00±0.00 | 0.00±0.00 | 124.77 | |
| COG [Hz] | 837.02±644.87 | 460.55±371.81 | 405.95±424.86 | 474.87±489.91 | 2.37 | 0.109 |
| SD [Hz] | 877.66±396.08 | 943.95±449.21 | 538.03±368.58 | 759.76±467.79 | 1.47 | 0.261 |
| SKE | 6.56±6.83 | 9.21±5.93 | 13.45±10.77 | 10.74±10.22 | 1.49 | 0.253 |
| KUR | 186.64±397.97 | 185.44±260.79 | 635.91±824.61 | 388.73±673.30 | 1.27 | 0.314 |
| 25% QUART [Hz] | 618.42±668.21 | 281.25±288.52 | 296.25±318.02 | 348.75±481.50 | 2.41 | 0.105 |
| 50% QUART [Hz] | 1192.50±927.04 | 986.92±798.64 | 654.58±540.22 | 864.67±804.62 | 0.75 | 0.538 |
| 75% QUART [Hz] | 2296.83±1313.67 | 2880.75±1659.07 | 1585.42±1120.83 | 2253.67±1374.78 | 1.92 | 0.164 |
| ENTR | 0.16±0.06 | 0.23±0.10 | 0.19±0.08 | 0.18±0.08 | 5.02 | |
| HNR [db] | 31.87±6.23 | 19.49±7.92 | 29.54±7.46 | 31.38±6.28 | 30.46 |
Nind, number of subjects from which the respective call type was recorded; (), number of subjects from which high-quality calls could be used for the acoustic analysis; Significant p values (p<0.05) are marked in bold.
Fig 2Scatterplot of the discriminant function analysis.
(a) DFA function 1 separates the Whines from the noisy call types. (b) DFA functions 2 and 3 separate the three noisy call types Snort, Threat and Pant.
Fig 3Cumulative barplots for the occurrence of calls.
(a) in different behavioural contexts and (b) directed to different interaction partners (in case of non-social behaviours the nearest neighbour).
Comparison of infant white rhinoceros vocalisations (present study) and the literature on adult vocalisations of the Northern [17] and Southern white rhinoceros [38].
| Adult | Infant | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Northern White Rhinoceros | Southern White Rhinoceros | Southern White Rhinoceros | |||
| Call type | Context | Call type | Context | Call type | Context |
| - | - | - | - | Whine | Suckling, distress |
| - | - | Squeal | Territorial behaviour, boundary blocking | - | - |
| - | - | Shriek | Elicited by fear, attack inhibition | - | - |
| Pant | Contact call, greeting | Pant | Contact call, friendly approach | Pant | Socio-positive interactions, contact call |
| Hic | Male courtship call | - | - | ||
| Threat | Aggressive interactions, first warning | Snort | Aggressive interactions, first warning | Threat | Socio-negative interactions |
| Snort | Not obvious, but mainly during foraging | Snort | General activities | ||
| Puff | Not obvious, but mainly during foraging | - | - | ||
| Grunt | Aggressive interactions, powerful warning | Snarl | Aggressive interactions, powerful warning | - | - |
| Snarl | Aggressive interaction, passive approach, first warning | - | - | ||
| - | - | Gruff-squeal | Territorial behaviour, chasing | - | - |
| - | - | Gasp-puff | Response to a sudden fright | - | - |
| Groan | Moan, body discomfort | - | - | - | - |
| Grouch | Foraging and other activities in proximity of other members of the herd | - | - | - | - |
| Hoarse | Feeding, approach to female | - | - | - | - |
* call descriptions of Owen-Smith [38] correspond to different call types in Policht et al. [17]