Did you know dolphins have unique whistles that act like names? This fascinating video explores the secret language of ...
Dolphins have their own signature whistle or ‘name’. When greeting, dolphins first produce their signature whistle to identify themselves and have been shown to remember a pod member’s ...
Either one dolphin is mimicking the other so quickly and precisely that the apparent coordination is only an illusion. Or it’s not an illusion at all: When they whistle back and forth beneath ...
Dolphins use a combination of clicks, whistles and body movements to communicate, with recent research suggesting that their vocalizations might follow a linguistic structure similar to human ...
Dolphin calls recorded in the 1970s were re-analyzed to reveal that dolphins use tissue vibrations rather than whistles to communicate. The research, published in Biology Letters, broke the recordings ...
“Dolphins use three main different vocal signals,” says Arik. Firstly, whistles. “They actually recycle their air inside their head, and the sound comes out of their forehead,” he explain ...