2008
DOI: 10.1121/1.2828210
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Classification of broadband echoes from prey of a foraging Blainville’s beaked whale

Abstract: Blainville's beaked whales ͑Mesoplodon densirostris͒ use broadband, ultrasonic echolocation signals with a −10 dB bandwidth from 26 to 51 kHz to search for, localize, and approach prey that generally consist of mid-water and deep-water fishes and squid. Although it is well known that the spectral characteristics of broadband echoes from marine organisms vary as a function of size, shape, orientation, and anatomical group, there is little evidence as to whether or not free-ranging toothed whales use spectral cu… Show more

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Cited by 34 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…A few recent studies show that the phases of prey capture in odontocetes ͑e.g., Miller et al, 1995;Madsen et al, 2002;Johnson et al, 2004;Miller et al, 2004;Akamatsu et al, 2005;Madsen et al, 2005;Johnson et al, 2006Johnson et al, , 2008Jones et al, 2008;Verfuß et al, 2009͒ are very similar to those of prey capture in bats ͑e.g., Griffin et al, 1960;Kalko and Schnitzler, 1989;Surlykke et al, 1993;Schnitzler and Kalko, 1998;Miller and Surlykke, 2001;Schnitzler et al, 2003;Melcón et al, 2007͒. Vocalizing with long intervals is used to search for prey items while a group of signals with short intervals, the buzz, indicate prey capture attempts.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 77%
“…A few recent studies show that the phases of prey capture in odontocetes ͑e.g., Miller et al, 1995;Madsen et al, 2002;Johnson et al, 2004;Miller et al, 2004;Akamatsu et al, 2005;Madsen et al, 2005;Johnson et al, 2006Johnson et al, , 2008Jones et al, 2008;Verfuß et al, 2009͒ are very similar to those of prey capture in bats ͑e.g., Griffin et al, 1960;Kalko and Schnitzler, 1989;Surlykke et al, 1993;Schnitzler and Kalko, 1998;Miller and Surlykke, 2001;Schnitzler et al, 2003;Melcón et al, 2007͒. Vocalizing with long intervals is used to search for prey items while a group of signals with short intervals, the buzz, indicate prey capture attempts.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 77%
“…It is assumed that during each phase, a whale has certain distributions of depth and pitch. Depths are described by Gaussian distributions with mean and standard deviations estimated from published dive profiles (Johnson et al, 2004;Madsen et al, 2005;Tyack et al, 2006;Ward et al, 2008;Jones et al, 2008). Whale pitch is measured from þ90 to À90 , where negative angles correspond to downward orientation.…”
Section: A Animal Location and Orientationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Tagged beaked whales appear to ensonify many more organisms in the course of a foraging dive than they attempt to capture , perhaps indicating that a large proportion of the echoic targets do not represent worthwhile prey and that the whales may use acoustic cues in a selective foraging scheme ). While we know little about the prey targeted by beaked whales and whether these have distinctive echo signatures (Jones et al 2008), analysis of the general target density as a function of depth may provide information about the habitats preferred by these elusive whales ). The tortuous track segment associated with the buzz cluster supports the idea of a prey patch Studies of foraging using acoustic tags have considerable promise, especially for echolocating whales.…”
Section: Foragingmentioning
confidence: 99%