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The term echolocation refers to an ability that odontocetes (and some other marine mammals and most bats) possess that enables them to locate and discriminate objects by projecting high-frequency sound waves and listening for echoes. |
| 2. |
A Commerson's dolphin echolocates by producing sound pulses and then receiving and interpreting the resulting echo. |
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The pulse trains pass through the melon (the rounded region of a Commerson's dolphin's forehead), which consists of lipids (fats). The melon acts as an acoustical lens to focus these sound waves into a beam, which is projected forward into water in front of the dolphin. |
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These sound waves bounce off objects in the water and return to the dolphin in the form of an echo. |
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The major areas of sound reception are the fat-filled cavities of the lower jaw bones. The lower jawbone receives and conducts sounds through the lower jaw to the middle ear, inner ear, and then to hearing centers in the brain via the auditory nerve. |
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The brain receives the sound waves in the form of nerve impulses, which relay the messages of sound and enable the dolphin to interpret the sound's meaning. |
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| 3. |
Most dolphins that are confirmed echolocators, like the bottlenose dolphin, use broadband clicks for their echolocation. The acoustic energy in these brief clicks (about 50 to 128 microseconds) is spread over a wide band of frequencies including the lower part of the human hearing range. |
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However, Commerson's dolphins produce directional, narrow band pulses. Each pulse lasts about 100 to 1,200 microseconds. The acoustic energy in these longer pulses is in a narrow band of frequencies very near the top of the known dolphin hearing range. |
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| 4. |
Dolphins can determine size, shape, speed, distance, direction, and even some of the internal structure of objects in the water. They are able to learn and later recognize the echo signatures returned by preferred prey species. |
| 5. |
The high frequency pulses of Commerson's dolphins are good for "seeing" fine details of objects on the seafloor. This correlates with the coastal seafloor food preferences of these dolphins. |