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Hearing in cetaceans : from natural history to experimental biology
Authors
Andersen
André
+217 more
Aroyan
Aroyan
Au
Au
Au
Au
Au
Au
Au
Awbrey
Balcomb
Benoit-Bird
Berg
Blomberg
Boenninghaus
Branstetter
Branstetter
Branstetter
Branstetter
Branstetter
Bregman
Brill
Brill
Brittan-Powell
Brownell
Buchanan
Bullock
Bullock
Camper
Casper
Clark
Claudius
Cook
Cox
Cranford
Cranford
Cranford
Cummings
Delory
Denker
Dolphin
Dolphin
Dudok Van Heel
Erbe
Evans
Fahlke
Fernandez
Finneran
Finneran
Finneran
Finneran
Finneran
Finneran
Finneran
Finneran
Finneran
Finneran
Finneran
Flewellen
Frantzis
Fraser
Fraser
Gouw
Hall
Hall
Hecox
Hemilä
Holt
Home
Houser
Houser
Houser
Houser
Houser
Hunter
Hustad
Ibsen
Jacobs
Jepson
Johnson
Johnson
Johnson
Kastelein
Kastelein
Kellogg
Kellogg
Kernan
Ketten
Ketten
Ketten
Ketten
Ketten
Klishin
Kloepper
Knudsen
Koopman
Koopman
Krysl
Kryter
Ladich
Ladygina
Ladygina
Lammers
Langworthy
Lemonds
Lemonds
Li
Li
Linnenschidt
Litchfield
Litchfield
Ljungblad
Lovell
Malins
Mann
McCormick
Miller
Mobley
Montie
Mooney
Mooney
Mooney
Mooney
Mooney
Moore
Moore
Moore
Moore
Morris
Møhl
Nachtigall
Nachtigall
Nachtigall
Nachtigall
Nachtigall
Nachtigall
Nachtigall
Ness
Norris
Norris
Norris
Nummela
Pacini
Pacini
Parks
Parks
Parks
Popov
Popov
Popov
Popov
Popov
Popov
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Popov
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Pytte
Rasmussen
Regan
Renaud
Reysenbach De Haan
Ridgway
Ridgway
Ridgway
Ridgway
Ridgway
Ridgway
Roitblat
Roitblat
Sauerland
Scano
Schevill
Schevill
Schlundt
Seeley
Soldevilla
Southall
Southall
Sukhoruchenko
Sukhoruchenko
Supin
Supin
Supin
Supin
Supin
Supin
Supin
Supin
Supin
Supin
Supin
Supin
Supin
Supin
Szymanski
Taylor
Thomas
Thompson
Trickey
Tyack
Vanke
Varanasi
Varansi
Vel'min
Wang
Ward
Ward
Watkins
Watkins
Wedmid
White
Yamada
Yamada
Yamato
Yamato
Yuen
Zahorodny
Publication date
1 January 2012
Publisher
'Elsevier BV'
Doi
Abstract
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2012. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Elsevier for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Advances in Marine Biology 63, edited by Michael Lesser, :197-246. Academic Press (Elsevier), 2013. ISBN: 9780123942821. doi:10.1016/B978-0-12-394282-1.00004-1Sound is the primary sensory cue for most marine mammals, and this is especially true for cetaceans. To passively and actively acquire information about their environment, cetaceans have perhaps the most derived ears of all mammals, capable of sophisticated, sensitive hearing and auditory processing. These capabilities have developed for survival in an underwater world where sound travels five times faster than in air, and where light is quickly attenuated and often limited at depth, at night, and in murky waters. Cetacean auditory evolution has capitalized on the ubiquity of sound cues and the efficiency of underwater acoustic communication. The sense of hearing is central to cetacean sensory ecology, enabling vital behaviors such as locating prey, detecting predators, identifying conspecifics, and navigating. Increasing levels of anthropogenic ocean noise appears to influence many of these activities. Here we describe the historical progress of investigations on cetacean hearing, with a particular focus on odontocetes and recent advancements. While this broad topic has been studied for several centuries, new technologies in the last two decades have been leveraged to improve our understanding of a wide range of taxa, including some of the most elusive species. This paper addresses topics including how sounds are received, what sounds are detected, hearing mechanisms for complex acoustic scenes, recent anatomy and physiology studies, the potential impacts of noise, and mysticete hearing. We conclude by identifying emerging research topics and areas which require greater focus.In compiling this review, TAM was supported by the John E. and Anne W. Sawyer Endowed Fund and the Penzance Endowed Fund
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