Recording primate vocalizations


Autoria(s): Geissman, Thomas; Parsons, Stuart
Contribuinte(s)

Setchell, J.

Curtis, D.

Data(s)

2011

Resumo

Ornithologists have been exploring the possibilities and the methodology of recording and archiving animal sounds for many decades. Primatologists, however, have only relatively recently become aware that recordings of primate sound may be just as valuable as traditional scientific specimens such as skins or skeletons, and should be preserved for posterity (Fig. 16.1). Audio recordings should be fully documented, archived and curated to ensure proper care and accessibility. As natural populations disappear, sound archives will become increasingly important (Bradbury et al., 1999). Studying animal vocal communication is also relevant from the perspective of behavioural ecology. Vocal communication plays a central role in animal societies. Calls are believed to provide various types and amounts of information. These may include, among other things: (1) information about the sender's identity (e.g. species, sex, age class, group membership or individual identity); (2) information about the sender's status andmood (e.g. dominance, fear or aggressive motivation, fitness); and (3) information about relevant events or discoveries in the sender's environment (e.g. predators, food location). When studying acoustic communication, sound recordings are usually required to analyse the spectral and temporal structure of vocalizations or to perform playback experiments (Chapter 11)...

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/80812/

Publicador

Cambridge University Press

Relação

http://www.gibbons.de/main/non-gibbon/pdf_files/2011sound-recording.pdf

Geissman, Thomas & Parsons, Stuart (2011) Recording primate vocalizations. In Setchell, J. & Curtis, D. (Eds.) Field and Laboratory Methods in Primatology : A Practical Guide [2nd. Ed.]. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 228-239.

Fonte

School of Earth, Environmental & Biological Sciences; Science & Engineering Faculty

Tipo

Book Chapter