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      Evidence for discrimination between feeding sounds of familiar fish and unfamiliar mammal-eating killer whale ecotypes by long-finned pilot whales

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          SCARED TO DEATH? THE EFFECTS OF INTIMIDATION AND CONSUMPTION IN PREDATOR–PREY INTERACTIONS

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            A digital acoustic recording tag for measuring the response of wild marine mammals to sound

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              Monkey responses to three different alarm calls: evidence of predator classification and semantic communication

              Vervet monkeys give different alarm calls to different predators. Recordings of the alarms played back when predators were absent caused the monkeys to run into trees for leopard alarms, look up for eagle alarms, and look down for snake alarms. Adults call primarily to leopards, martial eagles, and pythons, but infants give leopard alarms to various mammals, eagle alarms to many birds, and snake alarms to various snakelike objects. Predator classification improves with age and experience.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Animal Cognition
                Anim Cogn
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                1435-9448
                1435-9456
                June 22 2019
                Article
                10.1007/s10071-019-01282-1
                6bcd4b65-4f27-4a1b-8277-2e4a330923b9
                © 2019

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

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