1. Unusually high-pitched neonate distress calls of the open-habitat Mongolian gazelle (Procapra gutturosa) and their anatomical and hormonal predictors
- Author
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Roland Frey, Ilya A. Volodin, Vadim E. Kirilyuk, Elena V. Volodina, and Sergey V. Naidenko
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Larynx ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Saiga tatarica ,Physiology ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Russia ,Gazella subgutturosa ,Internal medicine ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,050102 behavioral science & comparative psychology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Procapra ,Testosterone ,Ecosystem ,biology ,05 social sciences ,General Medicine ,Mongolia ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Animals, Newborn ,Antelopes ,Mongolian gazelle ,Vocal folds ,Female ,Vocalization, Animal ,Vocal tract - Abstract
In neonate ruminants, the acoustic structure of vocalizations may depend on sex, vocal anatomy, hormonal profiles and body mass and on environmental factors. In neonate wild-living Mongolian gazelles Procapra gutturosa, hand-captured during biomedical monitoring in the Daurian steppes at the Russian-Mongolian border, we spectrographically analysed distress calls and measured body mass of 22 individuals (6 males, 16 females). For 20 (5 male, 15 female) of these individuals, serum testosterone levels were also analysed. In addition, we measured relevant dimensions of the vocal apparatus (larynx, vocal folds, vocal tract) in one stillborn male Mongolian gazelle specimen. Neonate distress calls of either sex were high in maximum fundamental frequency (800โ900 Hz), but the beginning and minimum fundamental frequencies were significantly lower in males than in females. Body mass was larger in males than in females. The levels of serum testosterone were marginally higher in males. No correlations were found between either body mass or serum testosterone values and any acoustic variable for males and females analysed together or separately. We discuss that the high-frequency calls of neonate Mongolian gazelles are more typical for closed-habitat neonate ruminants, whereas other open-habitat neonate ruminants (goitred gazelle Gazella subgutturosa, saiga antelope Saiga tatarica and reindeer Rangifer tarandus) produce low-frequency (
- Published
- 2017