JOURNAL ARTICLE

Differences in echolocation click patterns of the beluga (D e l p h i n a p t e r u sl e u c a s) and the bottlenose dolphin (T u r s i o p st r u n c a t u s)

Charles W. TurlRalph H. Penner

Year: 1989 Journal:   The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America Vol: 86 (2)Pages: 497-502   Publisher: Acoustical Society of America

Abstract

In an echolocation experiment, the target detection performance of a beluga and a bottlenose dolphin were similar, but each produced different patterns of echolocation click trains. The beluga emitted three different patterns of echolocation clicks. A pattern I click train started with low-amplitude clicks, followed by packets of clicks. A packet contained several clicks with interclick intervals less than the two-way travel time to the target; the interpacket intervals were greater than the two-way travel time. A pattern II click train consisted of a combination of individual clicks, some with intervals less than and some greater than the two-way travel time. This pattern did not contain packets. The third pattern of click trains consisted of individual clicks with interclick intervals less than the two-way travel time. However, the bottlenose dolphin always emitted clicks with interclick intervals greater than the two-way travel time. These differences in click patterns suggest that the beluga has a different echolocation strategy than the bottlenose dolphin.

Keywords:
Human echolocation Bottlenose dolphin Beluga Whale Beluga Acoustics Computer science Speech recognition Fishery Geology Biology Physics Oceanography

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