Logo image
Support for the beam focusing hypothesis in the false killer whale
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Support for the beam focusing hypothesis in the false killer whale

Laura N Kloepper, John R Buck, Adam B Smith, Alexander Ya Supin, Jason E Gaudette and Paul E Nachtigall
Journal of experimental biology, Vol.218(Pt 15), pp.2455-2462
08/01/2015
PMID: 26056247

Abstract

Animals Dolphins - physiology Echolocation - physiology Female Sound
The odontocete sound production system is complex and composed of tissues, air sacs and a fatty melon. Previous studies suggested that the emitted sonar beam might be actively focused, narrowing depending on target distance. In this study, we further tested this beam focusing hypothesis in a false killer whale. Using three linear arrays of hydrophones, we recorded the same emitted click at 2, 4 and 7 m distance and calculated the beamwidth, intensity, center frequency and bandwidth as recorded on each array at every distance. If the whale did not focus her beam, acoustics predicts the intensity would decay with range as a function of spherical spreading and the angular beamwidth would remain constant. On the contrary, our results show that as the distance from the whale to the array increases, the beamwidth is narrower and the received click intensity is higher than that predicted by a spherical spreading function. Each of these measurements is consistent with the animal focusing her beam on a target at a given range. These results support the hypothesis that the false killer whale is 'focusing' its sonar beam, producing a narrower and more intense signal than that predicted by spherical spreading.
url
https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.119966View
Published (Version of record) Open

Related links

Metrics

13 Record Views

Details

Logo image