| Literature DB >> 34038461 |
Sabrina Bettoni1, Angela Stoeger1, Camilo Rodriguez1, W Tecumseh Fitch1.
Abstract
Most aquatic mammals have complex social and communication systems. Interestingly, little is known about otters' vocal communication compared to other aquatic mammals. Here, for the first time, we acoustically describe vocalizations of the neotropical otter (Lontra longicaudis), a solitary and endangered New World otter species. We recorded vocalizations and behavioral contexts from six captive neotropical otters at Projeto Lontra, Santa Catarina Island, Brazil. Analysis of acoustic parameters were used to classify the vocalizations according to structure and context. We describe six call types with highly tonal as well as chaotic vocalizations with fundamental frequencies ranging from 90 to 2500 Hz. Additionally, we identified sex differences in the usage of calls. Results suggest that the neotropical river otter has a rich vocal repertoire, similar in complexity to other solitary otter species, but less complex than that of the social giant otter. Despite differences in sociality, phylogeny and ecology, L. longicaudis seems to possess vocalizations homologous to those found in other otters (e.g. hah and chirp), suggesting phylogenetic inertia in otter communicative repertoire. Otters thus offer an interesting but neglected group to explore the evolution of communication systems.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34038461 PMCID: PMC8153427 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0251974
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Spectrograms and oscillograms (top) of vocalizations emitted by neotropical river otters. (A) Chirp, (B) squeak, (C) chuckle, (D) hah, (E) growl, (F) scream.
Behavioral categories and descriptions associated with the vocal repertoire of the neotropical river otter.
| Grouped category | Category of behavior | Behavior |
|---|---|---|
| Physical attack on another otter of the same enclosure by biting, scratching or violent wrestling. | ||
| Physical attack on another otter of adjacent enclosure by biting, scratching or violent wrestling. | ||
| Defending itself by either crouching with its head down or turned towards the attacker with its head up and mouth slightly opened showing teeth, while another otter displayed direct agonistic behavior | ||
| Eating and increasing distance from another otter (that might be approaching). | ||
| Running away from another otter with fish in its mouth. | ||
| Turn body and move briskly towards the other otter while either vocalizing or showing threatening body posture to defend its food, during an attempt to steal food by another otter. | ||
| Holding its food (feeding time) warning with vocalization and gazing at the other otter (or human). | ||
| Showing discontent of the proximity of an individual from the adjacent enclosure by approaching the fence with an aggressive body posture and directed eye gaze. | ||
| Reacting to another otter touching it (or approached too close), and avoiding interaction by turning head, neck and gaze while showing aggressive body posture and/or vocalizing and slightly showing teeth. | ||
| Anxiously running to get food during feeding time and bumping into the other otter. | ||
| Interacting agonistically with human observer, moving towards them with aggressive body posture. | ||
| Reacting to human approach or proximity by either distancing away or orienting its body towards the person with a staring gaze. | ||
| Reacting to another individual during social play in the water by turning its head towards the other otter, opening mouth, showing teeth and/or softly biting the other otter. | ||
| Reacting (mild complaint) while being groomed by quickly turning its head towards the other otter, opening mouth showing teeth and/or softly biting the other otter, and sometimes vocalizing. | ||
| Reacting while being groomed by turning its head towards the other otter and/or vocalizing. | ||
| Both otters licking and/or scratching each other with their paws. | ||
| Licking or scratching the other otter with paws. | ||
| Being licked or scratched by another otter with its paws. | ||
| Swimming, walking or running one after another or together in an energetic manner and interacting physically with their mouths, paws and body contact with occasional soft bites. | ||
| Swimming together with another otter, male gently biting female’s neck region, pre-copulatory behavior. | ||
| Copulation. | ||
| Interacting with otter from adjacent enclosure, either by touching each other’s paws, sniffing each other or trying to reach each other. | ||
| Licking, scratching or biting its own fur while close to another otter or a human. | ||
| Physically interacting with people (with otter’s arms reaching outside of the enclosure) through the fence. | ||
| Approaching and looking at another otter that was eating fish, walking or swimming towards it, trying to get its food | ||
| Watching/observing another otter that is eating food, interested in the it. | ||
| Trying to approach and interact with another otter from the same enclosure by running or walking towards it. | ||
| Trying to approach and interact with another otter from adjacent enclosure by running or walking towards it. | ||
| Body positioned towards and gazing in direction to the other otter, moving in front of it to attract its attention. | ||
| Trying to interact with people through the fence by vocalizing and sticking forelimbs through the fence while looking at people. | ||
| Observing and paying attention to another otter. | ||
| Observing another otter and moving its head/neck/body trying to get close to it. | ||
| Climbing up the fence to look inside other otters’ enclosure. | ||
| Running towards people. | ||
| Walking towards people. | ||
| Observing and paying attention to people. | ||
| Running from one side to the other of the enclosure (usually pre feeding) or climbing up and down the fence. | ||
| Run in direction to the fence. | ||
| Climbing up the fence to look outside of their enclosures. | ||
| Watching the environment outside of their enclosure in an excited manner, either rapidly moving eye gaze, head and neck movements, or standing up in their hind legs. | ||
| Run in direction of the pool. | ||
| Walking in direction of the fence. | ||
| Watching the environment outside of their enclosure. | ||
| Moving either head, body or eye gaze in a rapid manner while waiting for food to come out of the feeding tube or by the fence. | ||
| Running in an exciting manner to obtain food. | ||
| Walking rapidly with food in its mouth, just after receiving it. |
Emission rate, mean and standard deviation (SD), per call type and sex.
| Call type | Emission rate (calls/hour) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Per call type | Per call type for females | Per call type for males | ||||
| Mean | SD | Mean | SD | Mean | SD | |
| 3.9 | 3.3 | 2.4 | 3.3 | 4.8 | 3.1 | |
| 4 | 3.4 | 4.4 | 3.7 | 2 | 1 | |
| 8.2 | 16 | 5 | 4.7 | 11.1 | 21.4 | |
| 2.5 | 2.1 | 2.7 | 2.2 | 2.6 | 2.2 | |
| 5 | 8.2 | 6.8 | 11.2 | 3.5 | 4.1 | |
| 5.7 | 9.1 | 7.8 | 11.5 | 3.4 | 4.0 | |
Means, standard deviations (SD) and ranges for 12 (Tonal calls) and 4 (NLP calls) acoustic parameters of otters’ calls.
| Tonal vs. irregular calls | Call Type (sample size) | Acoustic property | Mean | SD | Range |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tonal | Chirp (217) | Mean fundamental Frequency (f0) (Hz) | 919.98 | 106.01 | (621.24–1249.19) |
| Minimum f0 (Hz) | 646.57 | 108.08 | (479.48–1027.37) | ||
| Maximum f0 (Hz) | 1147.40 | 126.67 | (828.41–1410.41) | ||
| Dominant Frequency (Hz) | 1029.61 | 388.64 | (550–2350) | ||
| Standard deviation of f0 (Hz) | 154.52 | 52.17 | (41.40–286.08) | ||
| Initial f0 (Hz) | 914.02 | 169.13 | (589.39–1303.59) | ||
| Mid-point f0 (Hz) | 1019.12 | 165.05 | (577.91–1324.24) | ||
| End f0 (Hz) | 972.56 | 167.74 | (594.72–1408.45) | ||
| Slope First Half (Hz) | 1621.41 | 10387.81 | (-46381.54–30818.24) | ||
| Slope Second Half (Hz) | -7020.44 | 7479.46 | (-36257.84–17430.16) | ||
| Duration (Sec) | 0.08 | 0.08 | (0.02–0.60) | ||
| F0 Range (Hz) | 500.82 | 141.93 | (184.54–858.53) | ||
| Squeak (9) | Mean f0 (Hz) | 545.24 | 181.61 | (334.91–772.21) | |
| Minimum f0 (Hz) | 479.28 | 158.15 | (302.04–699.55) | ||
| Maximum f0 (Hz) | 614.91 | 212.43 | (349.63–835.90) | ||
| Dominant Frequency (Hz) | 690 | 114.02 | (550–850) | ||
| Standard deviation of f0 (Hz) | 37.76 | 19.50 | (17.88–59.42) | ||
| Initial f0 (Hz) | 540.38 | 179.78 | (302.04–787.84) | ||
| Mid-point f0 (Hz) | 542.73 | 167.65 | (345.62–771.68) | ||
| End f0 (Hz) | 511.81 | 178.13 | (305.65–704.57) | ||
| Slope First Half (Hz) | 121.96 | 2858.64 | (-4070.55–3631.36) | ||
| Slope Second Half (Hz) | -3024.12 | 2763.12 | (-4995.78–1780.92) | ||
| Duration (Sec) | 0.04 | 0.02 | (0.02–0.06) | ||
| F0 Range (Hz) | 135.62 | 83.28 | (47.58–235.40) | ||
| Chuckle (62) | Mean f0 (Hz) | 196.42 | 16.91 | (174.35–229.92) | |
| Minimum f0 (Hz) | 153.49 | 10.27 | (136.55–182.44) | ||
| Maximum f0 (Hz) | 252.45 | 31.97 | (204.24–301.41) | ||
| Dominant Frequency (Hz) | 577.78 | 196.46 | (350–1050) | ||
| Standard deviation of f0 (Hz) | 27.26 | 12.59 | (10.18–56.82) | ||
| Initial f0 (Hz) | 208.51 | 38.09 | (162.77–291.56) | ||
| Mid-point f0 (Hz) | 197.95 | 33.04 | (151.02–259.21) | ||
| End f0 (Hz) | 193.86 | 31.56 | (151.12–270.29) | ||
| Slope First Half (Hz) | -298.63 | 811.03 | (-2161.74–842.42) | ||
| Slope Second Half (Hz) | 215.01 | 702.11 | (-722.95–2348.72) | ||
| Duration (Sec) | 0.12 | 0.03 | (0.09–0.18) | ||
| F0 Range (Hz) | 98.96 | 37.11 | (36.77–162.96) | ||
| Growl (4) | Mean f0 (Hz) | 118.88 | 8.84 | (106.88–127.62) | |
| Minimum f0 (Hz) | 102.94 | 14.71 | (88.71–122.43) | ||
| Maximum f0 (Hz) | 131.19 | 3.72 | (126.02–134.57) | ||
| Dominant Frequency (Hz) | 975.00 | 556.03 | (350–1650) | ||
| Standard deviation of f0 (Hz) | 7.01 | 3.62 | (2.77–11.31) | ||
| Initial f0 (Hz) | 113.18 | 19.18 | (88.75–132.77) | ||
| Mid-point f0 (Hz) | 121 | 9.55 | (108.40–131.58) | ||
| End f0 (Hz) | 120.33 | 9.89 | (108.06–129.01) | ||
| Slope First Half (Hz) | -2.08 | 85.76 | (-121.98–76.99) | ||
| Slope Second Half (Hz) | -13.33 | 26.33 | (-50.35–11.29) | ||
| Duration (Sec) | 0.44 | 0.33 | (0.19–0.88) | ||
| F0 Range (Hz) | 28.26 | 12.49 | (12.14–42.43) | ||
| Irregular | Hah (112) | Dominant Frequency (Hz) | 1385.06 | 403.53 | (750–3450) |
| Duration (Sec) | 0.50 | 0.11 | (0.3–0.9) | ||
| Tonal duration (Sec) | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| NLP duration (Sec) | 0.50 | 0.11 | (0.3–0.9) | ||
| Scream (94) | Dominant Frequency (Hz) | 1700 | 1071.90 | (550–4950) | |
| Duration (Sec) | 0.50 | 0.45 | (0.08–2.57) | ||
| Tonal duration (Sec) | 0.27 | 0.27 | (0–1.38) | ||
| NLP duration (Sec) | 0.24 | 0.42 | (0–2.57) |
Fig 2Biplot of multiple correspondence analysis with hierarchical clustering summarizing the association between call types, behavioral contexts and sexes.
Larger symbols represent centroids, and ellipses represent 95% confidence intervals.
Fig 3Box plot showing the difference between call types in their acoustic parameters represented by the first (A; explained variance = 59%), second (B; explained variance = 21%) and third (C; explained variance = 20%) principal components for Tonal calls. *P<0.05; **P<0.001.
Fig 4Box plot showing the difference between call types in their acoustic parameters represented by the first (A; explained variance = 56%) and second (B; explained variance = 44%) principal components for NLP calls. **P<0.001.
Fig 5General information about otter species.
(A) Phylogenetic tree (adapted from Koepfli et al. 2008 [10]); (B) Overview of otter species whose vocal repertoires have been studied.