• Title of article

    Yellow-bellied marmots discriminate between the alarm calls of individuals and are more responsive to calls from juveniles

  • Author/Authors

    Blumstein، Daniel T. نويسنده , , Daniel، Janice C. نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
  • Pages
    -1256
  • From page
    1257
  • To page
    0
  • Abstract
    Unlike individually distinctive territorial calls, contact calls, or calls that aid in the recognition of young by their parents, the function or functions of individually distinctive alarm calls (vocalizations produced in response to predators) is not immediately apparent. Yellow-bellied marmots, Marmota flaviventris, ground-dwelling sciurid rodents, produce individually distinctive alarm calls. Using an habituation-recovery playback protocol, we show that marmots can perceive differences between the calls of different adult females. We further show that marmots are able to discriminate between at least one broad age-sex category. In contrast to what has been reported in other species, playback of calls from juveniles elicited a greater response (i.e. marmots increased vigilance and suppressed foraging) than did playback of calls from adult females. No other age-sex category led to responses significantly different from adult females. Future studies will seek to understand why individual discriminative abilities exist, but we have shown that individuals are able to identify when young, and presumably vulnerable, marmots are calling, and to respond by engaging in vigilance.
  • Keywords
    pyrrolopyridine , copper (II) bromide , regioselective halogenation of 6-azaindoles
  • Journal title
    Animal Behaviour
  • Serial Year
    2004
  • Journal title
    Animal Behaviour
  • Record number

    112144