Blue Whale songs consist of an A call, a series of pulses, followed by a long, low moan called the B call. This A-B sequence is repeated over and over again, approximately once every 130 seconds.
Just like popular songs on TikTok, new humpback whale songs can rapidly spread across regions and populations to replace ...
Up to 26,545 blue whale songs in the Antarctic were captured by scientists in a study. They used - for the first time - new acoustical detection and tracking techniques to locate and observe them.
Most of us are familiar with whale song, but new research suggests that the structure of the song - the individual parts that make up the whole - has similarities to human language.
Their aim was to record the signals from earthquakes which ... But in addition to sensing quakes, the instruments also picked up whale song. The data above has been "sonified" to make it audible.
Whale song can be as efficient as – and, in some cases, more efficient than – human communication, according to a new study in Science Advances ...
Whale song can be as efficient as – and, in some cases, more efficient than – human communication, according to a new study in Science Advances. Meanwhile, new unrelated research in Science further ...
Ocean-bottom seismology stations are designed to monitor earthquakes, and often pick up whale songs. Researchers have previously used these incidental recordings to track fin whale movements, but this ...