Why do whales sing Stephanie Sardelis

Communicating underwater is challenging.

Light and odors don’t travel well,
so it’s hard for animals to see or smell.

But sound moves about four times
faster in water than in air,

so in this dark environment,

marine mammals often rely
on vocalization to communicate.

That’s why a chorus of sounds fills
the ocean.

Clicks,

pulses,

whistles,

groans,

boings,

cries,

and trills, to name a few.

But the most famous parts of this
underwater symphony

are the evocative melodies, or songs,
composed by the world’s largest mammals,

whales.

Whale songs are one of the most
sophisticated communication systems

in the animal kingdom.

Only a few species are known to sing.

Blue,

fin,

bowhead

minke whales,

and of course humpback whales.

These are all baleen whales

which use hairy baleen plates
instead of teeth to trap their prey.

Meanwhile, toothed whales do use
echolocation,

and they and other species
of baleen whales

make social sounds, such as
cries and whistles, to communicate.

But those vocalizations
lack the complexity of songs.

So how do they do it?

Land mammals like us generate sound
by moving air over our vocal cords

when we exhale,
causing them to vibrate.

Baleen whales have a U-shaped fold
of tissue between their lungs

and their large inflatable organs
called laryngeal sacs.

We don’t know this for sure

because it’s essentially impossible
to observe the internal organs

of a living, singing whale,

but we think that when a whale sings,

muscular contractions in the throat
and chest

move air from the lungs across
the U-fold and into the laryngeal sacs,

causing the U-fold to vibrate.

The resulting sound resonates in the sacs
like a choir singing in a cathedral

making songs loud enough to propagate
up to thousands of kilometers away.

Whales don’t have to exhale to sing.

Instead, the air is recycled
back into the lungs,

creating sound once more.

One reason whale songs are so fascinating
is their pattern.

Units, like moans, cries, and chirps
are arranged in phrases.

Repeated phrases
are assembled into themes.

Multiple themes repeated in a predictable
pattern create a song.

This hierarchical structure
is a kind of grammar.

Whale songs are extremely variable
in duration,

and whales can repeat them over and over.

In one recorded session,
a humpback whale sang for 22 hours.

And why do they do it?

We don’t yet know the exact purpose,
but we can speculate.

Given that the singers are males and
they mostly sing during the mating season,

songs might be used to attract females.

Or perhaps they’re territorial,
used to deter other males.

Whales return to the same feeding
and breeding grounds annually,

and each discrete population has
a different song.

Songs evolve over time as units
or phrases are added, changed, or dropped.

And when males from different populations
are feeding within earshot,

phrases are often exchanged,

maybe because new songs make them more
attractive to breeding females.

This is one of the fastest examples
of cultural transmission,

where learned behaviors are passed
between unrelated individuals

of the same species.

We can eavesdrop on these songs
using underwater microphones

called hydrophones.

These help us track species when sightings
or genetic samples are rare.

For example, scientists have been able
to differentiate

the elusive blue whale’s populations
worldwide based on their songs.

But the oceans are getting noisier
as a result of human activity.

Boating,

military sonar,

underwater construction,

and seismic surveys for oil
are occurring more often

which may interfere
with whale’s communication.

Some whales will avoid key feeding
or breeding grounds

if human noise is too loud.

And humpback whales have been observed
to reduce their singing

in response to noise 200 kilometers away.

Limiting human activity
along migratory routes

and in other critical habitats,

and reducing noise pollution
throughout the ocean

would help ensure
whales continued survival.

If the whales can keep singing
and we can keep listening,

maybe one day we’ll truly understand
what they’re saying.

水下通信具有挑战性。

光和气味不能很好地传播,
因此动物很难看到或闻到。

但声音
在水中的传播速度大约是空气中的四倍,

因此在这种黑暗的环境中,

海洋哺乳动物往往
依靠发声来交流。

这就是为什么一个合唱的声音充满
了海洋。

点击,

脉冲,

口哨,

呻吟,

boings,

哭泣

和颤音,仅举几例。

但这部水下交响乐中最著名的部分是

由世界上最大的哺乳动物

鲸鱼创作的令人回味的旋律或歌曲。

鲸歌是动物王国中最
复杂的交流系统

之一。

只有少数物种会唱歌。

蓝鲸、

长须鲸、

弓头

小须鲸

,当然还有座头鲸。

这些都是须

鲸,它们使用毛茸茸的须板
代替牙齿来捕捉猎物。

与此同时,齿鲸确实使用
回声定位

,它们和其他种类
的须鲸会

发出社交声音,例如叫
喊声和口哨声,以进行交流。

但这些发声
缺乏歌曲的复杂性。

那么他们是怎么做到的呢? 当我们呼气时,

像我们这样的陆地哺乳动物
通过在我们的声带上移动空气来产生声音


从而使它们振动。

须鲸
的肺

和称为喉囊的大型充气器官之间有一个 U 形的组织褶皱

我们不确定这一点,

因为基本上
不可能观察

活着的、会唱歌的鲸鱼的内部器官,

但我们认为,当鲸鱼唱歌时,

喉咙
和胸部的肌肉收缩

将空气从肺部
穿过 U 形折叠 并进入喉囊,

导致 U 形褶振动。

由此产生的声音在囊中产生共鸣,
就像唱诗班在大教堂里唱歌一样,

使歌曲的声音大到可以
传播到数千公里以外。

鲸鱼不必呼气唱歌。

相反,空气被循环
回肺部,

再次发出声音。

鲸歌如此迷人的原因之一
是它们的模式。

单位,如呻吟声、哭声和唧唧声
是按短语排列的。

重复的
短语组合成主题。

以可预测的模式重复的多个主题
创建了一首歌曲。

这种层次结构
是一种语法。

鲸鱼歌曲的持续时间变化很大

,鲸鱼可以一遍又一遍地重复它们。

在一个录制的会话中,
一头座头鲸歌唱了 22 小时。

他们为什么要这样做?

我们还不知道确切的目的,
但我们可以推测。

鉴于歌手是男性,
他们大多在交配季节唱歌,

歌曲可能被用来吸引女性。

或者他们可能是领地的,
用来阻止其他男性。

鲸鱼每年都会回到同一个觅食
和繁殖地

,每个离散的种群
都有不同的歌声。

随着单元
或短语的添加、更改或删除,歌曲会随着时间的推移而演变。

当来自不同种群的雄性
在耳边觅食时,

经常交换短语,

也许是因为新歌让它们
对繁殖的雌性更具吸引力。

这是文化传播最快的例子之一

,学习行为

在同一物种的无关个体之间传递。

我们可以
使用称为水听器的水下麦克风窃听这些歌曲

当目击或遗传样本很少时,这些有助于我们追踪物种

例如,科学家们已经能够根据它们的歌曲
来区分

全球难以捉摸的蓝鲸种群

但由于人类活动,海洋变得越来越嘈杂

划船、

军事声纳、

水下建筑

和石油地震勘测
更频繁地发生

,这可能会
干扰鲸鱼的通信。 如果人类噪音太大,

一些鲸鱼会避开关键的觅食
或繁殖地

并且已经观察到座头鲸会

在 200 公里外的噪音中减少歌声。

限制
迁徙路线

和其他重要栖息地的人类活动,

并减少
整个海洋的噪音污染,

将有助于确保
鲸鱼继续生存。

如果鲸鱼能一直唱歌
,我们能一直听,

也许有一天我们会真正
理解它们在说什么。