A research project has distinguished nearly 200
different whistles that dolphins make, linking some of
them to specific behaviors. Liz Hawkins of Southern
Cross University in Lismore, Australia, has concluded
that their communication is “highly complex and it
is contextual, so in a sense, it could be termed a language,”
as she told the magazine New Scientist.
Hawkins recorded a total of 1,647 whistles from
51 different pods of dolphins living in Byron Bay, just
south of Brisbane. She identified 186 different whistle
types. Of these, 20 were especially common.
Dolphins use “signature” whistles to identify themselves
to others and refer to each other in their whistles,
something no other animals are known to do. But they
are apparently saying much more. When a pod was
traveling, for instance, 57 percent of the whistles were
“sine” whistles, rising and falling symmetrically. But
when the dolphins were feeding or resting, they made
far fewer whistles of this type. And while socializing,
they communicated almost exclusively using flat-toned
or rising-toned whistles.
The dolphins often made a particular flat-toned
whistle when they rode the waves created by Hawkins’s
boat, and it’s tempting to speculate that the whistle is
the equivalent of a child going “wheeee!” In a group of
dolphins living off Queensland, Hawkins identified a
whistle often emitted by an animal when it was on its
own. “That whistle could definitely mean: ‘I’m here,
where is everyone?’” says Hawkins.
Melinda Rekdahl of the University of Queensland
found dolphins make more whistles when they’re being
hand-fed than those feeding in the wild. “It’s too early
to know whether whistles might mean something as
specific as ‘hurry up’ or ‘there’s food over here,’” she
says. “But it’s possible. Dolphin communication is much
more complicated than we thought.”
A review of the science of dolphin communication
can be found at http://acp.eugraph.com.