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STEM

黑料不打烊 Researcher Finds Wolf Subspecies Have Unique Howl Patterns

Friday, March 25, 2016, By Elizabeth Droge-Young
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Research and Creative
coyote

An international team of researchers, including 黑料不打烊 postdoctoral researcher Holly Root-Gutteridge, discovered that different canids, a group including wolves, coyotes and domestic dogs, all have their own ways of howling.

A southern drawl or a cockney accent can quickly pinpoint where a person grew up. Researchers have found that regional vocalization patterns aren鈥檛 just for humans鈥攄ialects can likewise differ among groups of wolves.

Gutteridge_cas

Holly Root-Gutteridge

An international team of researchers, including 黑料不打烊 postdoctoral researcher , discovered that different canids, a group including wolves, coyotes and domestic dogs, all have their own ways of howling. Root-Gutteridge says, 鈥淚鈥檝e been known to compare American wolves to jazz singers because they move around a lot vocally. European wolves are more like classical singers, where they hit a note and hold it.鈥 The results from this study have implications for the conservation of the critically endangered red wolf.

Researchers, led by University of Cambridge Herchel Smith Research Fellow Arik Kershenbaum, compared recordings of over 2,000 howls from 13 different species and subspecies to look for group-specific differences. Recordings were accumulated from international acoustic libraries, recordings from wolf researchers and even YouTube. Domestic dogs were included in the study thanks to one tenacious intern who sifted through 鈥渕any, many hours鈥 of YouTube clips of howling pets.

The team compared vocalizations of different canids to identify differences in howling frequency. As Root-Gutteridge explains, the researchers 鈥渇ollowed the notes wolves 鈥榮ing.鈥欌 She continues, 鈥淔or example, if you sing 鈥榙o-re-mi,鈥 you鈥檙e hitting different frequencies.鈥

Red wolf howl courtesy of British Library Sound Archive

Differences were often found in the notes wolves howled, or how quickly they moved through them. Surprisingly, two different species, red wolves and coyotes, shared many common howl characteristics. These two species not only share overlapping ranges in the American southeast, but they have also been known to mate with one another. Hybrid matings are a major problem for protecting the genetic purity of the critically endangered red wolf. Root-Gutteridge suggests that the overlapping vocalization types of the two species may be due to their mixed genetics.

Root-Gutteridge aims to map even finer-scale differences in vocalization patterns in the future, down to regional dialects within subspecies. She says, 鈥淎s an analogy, if someone has an American accent, most people recognize, 鈥極h it鈥檚 American鈥, but there are finer differences in dialects from North Carolina versus Texas versus Virginia. You might have to listen a little harder to pick out the latter.鈥

Her future plans represent a heightened level of resolution than Root-Gutteridge鈥檚 earliest research on wolf vocalizations. Prior to her Ph.D. research, she volunteered with a team investigating southern European wolves. 鈥淲e鈥檇 go to the top of these Italian mountains and we鈥檇 howl at the wolves using a machine. Then we鈥檇 stand there and listen and start arguing about how many wolves were howling back to us.鈥 While nights with no replies were easy to record, when multiple wolves responded she found it increasingly tricky to identify how many wolves and of what ages were in the area.

鈥淔rom Italian mountaintops to Cambridge professors, it鈥檚 been quite a ride,鈥 Root-Gutteridge says.

The team鈥檚 paper was recently published in Behavioural Processes and can be accessed .

Coyote howl courtesy of British Library Sound Archive

  • Author

Elizabeth Droge-Young

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