Elephants and Sirenians: A Comparative Review across Related Taxa in Regard to Learned Vocal Behavior

Anton Baotic, Beth Brady, E. Ramos, Angela S. Stoeger
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Vocal production learning is the ability to modify a vocal output in response to auditory experience. It is essential for human speech production and language acquisition. Vocal learning evolved independently several times in vertebrates, indicating evolutionary pressure in favor of this trait. This enables cross-species comparative analysis to be used to test evolutionary hypotheses. Humans share this ability with a versatile but limited group of species: songbirds, parrots and hummingbirds, bats, cetaceans, seals, and elephants. Although case studies demonstrate that African savanna and Asian elephants are capable of heterospecific imitation, including imitation of human words, our under standing of both the underlying mechanisms and the adaptive relevance within the elephant’s natural communication system is limited. Even though comparing phylogenetically distant species is intriguing, it is also worthwhile to investigate whether and to what extent learned vocal behavior is apparent in species phylogenetically close to an established vocal learner. For elephants, this entails determining whether their living relatives share their special ability for (complex) vocal learning. In this review, we address vocal learning in Elephantidea and Sirenia, sister groups within the Paenungulata. So far, no research has been done on vocal learning in Sirenians. Because of their aquatic lifestyle, vocalization structure, and evolutionary relationship to elephants, we believe Sirenians are a particularly interesting group to study. This review covers the most important acoustic aspects related to vocal learning in elephants, manatees, and dugongs, as well as knowledge gaps that must be filled for one to fully comprehend why vocal learning evolved (or did not) in these distinctive but phylogenetically related taxa. intellectual into the design of Figure 5, illustrating the manatee and elephant vocal apparatus.
大象和海象:关于习得发声行为的跨相关分类群的比较回顾
发声学习是根据听觉经验修改发声输出的能力。它对人类语言的产生和语言习得至关重要。声音学习在脊椎动物中独立进化了几次,表明进化压力有利于这一特征。这使得跨物种比较分析可以用来检验进化假说。人类与多种多样但数量有限的物种共享这种能力:鸣禽、鹦鹉和蜂鸟、蝙蝠、鲸目动物、海豹和大象。尽管案例研究表明,非洲草原象和亚洲象具有异种模仿能力,包括模仿人类语言,但我们对大象自然交流系统的潜在机制和适应性相关性的理解有限。尽管比较系统发育上遥远的物种是有趣的,但研究在系统发育上接近已建立的发声学习者的物种中习得的发声行为是否明显以及在多大程度上明显也是值得的。对于大象来说,这需要确定它们的现存亲戚是否拥有(复杂的)声音学习的特殊能力。在这篇综述中,我们讨论了象科和Sirenia的声乐学习,它们是Paenungulata的姐妹群体。到目前为止,还没有对塞雷纳人的声乐学习进行过研究。由于它们的水生生活方式、发声结构以及与大象的进化关系,我们认为Sirenians是一个特别有趣的研究群体。这篇综述涵盖了与大象、海牛和儒艮的声乐学习相关的最重要的声学方面,以及必须填补的知识空白,以便充分理解为什么声乐学习在这些独特但系统发育相关的分类群中进化(或没有)。图5,说明了海牛和大象的发声器官。
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